Smart Card Alliance to hold FIPS demonstrations at ISC-West
Apr 3, 2006 3:40 PM
U.S. government agencies and federal contractors working toward compliance with FIPS 201, the Personal Identity Verification (PIV) standard for a converged, government-wide physical and logical access credential, are finding that implementation can include many technical, project and process challenges.
To help them meet these challenges, the Smart Card Alliance will sponsor a live demonstration of an end-to-end FIPS 201 identity management system process at ISC-West 2006 in Las Vegas, booth #25143, from April 5-7, 2006.
The demonstration, covering enrollment, registration, printing, issuance, activation and use of a PIV card, will be presented by Alliance members Northrop Grumman Corp., Viisage and ActivIdentity.
FIPS 201, created by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and published in February 2005, is the outgrowth of Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12 (HSPD 12), which requires the establishment of an identification standard for federal employees and contractors. The directive aims to eliminate variations in the quality and security of federal access credentials in order to provide stronger protection against physical and network intrusions.
The Alliance has also organized an ISC West panel discussion entitled "Smart Cards: Evolution of Security Credentials for Physical and Logical Security" on Wednesday, April 5th at 1 p.m. The discussion will cover smart card usage for physical and logical access and integration with biometrics, PKI and card management. Panelists include moderator Robert Merkert, vice president of sales, Americas, SCM Microsystems Inc.; Bill Vass, senior vice president and chief information officer, Sun Microsystems; Lynne Prince, Common Access Card Office, Defense Manpower Data Center, Department of Defense; and Steve Rogers, vice president of sales, Integrated Engineering.
"Driven by the need for greater overall security in the post-9/11 world, and enabled by advances in smart card technology, the convergence of physical and logical access control onto a single secure credential is moving beyond discussion to reality in government agencies and corporations," says Randy Vanderhoof, executive director of the Smart Card Alliance. "As such, security professionals in both sectors need solid, timely and actionable information as they implement major infrastructure changes."
For more information on ISC-West, visit www.iscwest.com. For more on the Smart Card Alliance, visit www.smartcardalliance.org.
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
Today's New Product
B.I.G. Parking Control/Guard BoothManufactured for Louisiana State University, The Estate parking control/guard booth from B.I.G. Enterprises was built to strict hurricane codes due to Hurricane Katrina. The booth features a copper standing seam roof, gutters and downspouts. It comes factory-prepared for on-site installation of architectural brick and has extensive electrical, high-output HVAC, data and communication lines, shelves and cabinets. |
advertisement
This month in Access Control
- Opening Up About Door Closers
- An Enterprise Approach
- The Framework For Open Systems
- On A Higher Plane
- More from April's issue
advertisement







