New Startup Footprint Tackles Identity Verification PlatoBlockchain Data Intelligence. Vertical Search. Ai.

New Startup Footprint Tackles Identity Verification

Whenever a person walks into a financial services institution to open a bank account, apply for a loan, or obtain a credit card, that institution needs to first verify that person’s identity. That is usually taken care of by the person filling out a form providing personal information, and the the institution matches up the information against a series of databases. This process is repeated for every transaction, even if it is within the same institution.

The current system can tell that a real person is trying to open an account, but it doesn’t actually verify if the person who is submitting the information is really the person whose information was provided.

There are the problems Footprint, which announced a $6 million seed investment on Wednesday, wants to solve. Footprint intends to change how identity verification is performed by giving enterprises the tools to verify, authenticate, authorize, and secure identity. 

The company relies on cryptography to tokenize identity and uses cutting-edge biometric scans, liveness checks, and peer-to-peer verification to validate people are who they say they are. The approach is similar to Apple Pay in that the personal information – such as Social Security number, date of birth, email address, and phone number — is encrypted and stored in a secure enclave on the user’s mobile device. The enclave is backed by hardware-level cryptographic attestation, the company says. Each user has a private key pair for access, and Footprint uses FaceID, TouchID, and other technologies to verify the authenticity of the person.

The tools would address challenges related to Know-Your-Customer, identity verification, and securely storing personal identifiable information while keeping people in control of their identity, the company says. The organization won’t actually have to collect or store PII. Footprint can pave the way for “a better OAUth for Fintech,” the company says.

The product is currently in early access release. The tool is expected to be generally available in the fall.

“Footprint up-levels the consumer experience by becoming their passport to the internet,” the company said in the release.

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