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What is Biometric Data

Personal Data Protection and Legal Developments in the European Union
In a technical sense, biometric data refer to technical processing that leads from biometric information or characteristics to a (digital) format (e.g. a template) that can be used to recognize individuals. In a legal sense, biometric data are a type of personal data extracted from physical, physiological and behavioral characteristics.
Published in Chapter:
Biometric Data in the EU (Reformed) Data Protection Framework and Border Management: A Step Forward or an Unsatisfactory Move?
Simone Casiraghi (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium) and Alessandra Calvi (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-9489-5.ch010
Abstract
Biometrics technologies have been spreading cross-sector in the public and private domains. Their potential intrusiveness, in particular regarding privacy and data protection, has called the European legislators, in the recent EU data protection reform, to introduce a definition of “biometric data,” and to grant biometric data specific protection, as a “special category of data.” Despite the reformed framework, in the field of border management, the use of biometric data is expected to increase steadily because it is seen as a more efficient and reliable solution. This chapter will look into the reformed data protection and border management legal frameworks to highlight discrepancies between the two, and ultimately assess to what extent the new data protection reformed regime for biometric data is satisfactory.
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More Results
Digital Identity and Data Sovereignty: Redefining Global Information Flows
Biometric data includes physiological or behavioral characteristics used for biometric authentication, such as fingerprints, retina scans, or voiceprints.
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Facial Recognition Technology: Ethical and Legal Implications
Measurements that are taken to capture a person's physical traits in order to match an identity. Examples of biometric data can include fingerprints, retinal scans, face capturing, or even voice recognition (Johansen, 2019).
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Contemporary Imagetics and Post-Images in Digital Media Art: Inspirational Artists and Current Trends (1948-2020)
Information data from the human body, such as height, fingerprints, body measurements, temperature, etc.
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