In 2016, less than 5 percent of organizations
used smartphones to enable access to offices and other premises. By 2020,
Gartner, Inc. said that 20 percent of organizations will use smartphones in
place of traditional physical access cards.
"A significant fraction of organizations use legacy
physical access technologies that are proprietary, closed systems and have
limited ability to integrate with IT infrastructure," said David Anthony Mahdi, research director at
Gartner. "Today, the increasing availability of mobile and cloud technologies from many physical access control system
(PACS*) vendors will have major impacts on how these systems can be implemented
and managed."
PACS technology is widely deployed across
multiple vertical industries and geographies to secure access to a wide range
of facilities (buildings, individual offices, data centers, plant rooms,
warehouses and so on), ensuring that only entitled people (employees, contractors,
visitors, maintenance staff) get access to specific locations.
Mobile technology is
already widely used for logical access control. Phone-as-a-token authentication
methods continue to be the preferred choice in the majority of new
and refreshed token deployments as an alternative to traditional one-time
password (OTP) hardware tokens. Gartner projects that the same kinds of cost
and user experience (UX) benefits will drive increasing use of smartphones in
place of discrete physical access cards. Smartphones using technologies and
protocols such as Bluetooth, Bluetooth LE, and Near Field Communication can
work with a number of readers and PACS technology.
One
of the easiest ways to use a smartphone's access credentials is to integrate
them — via a data channel over the air or via Wi-Fi — into the access control
system (ACS) and "unlock the door" remotely (just as an ACS
administrator can). This approach requires no change to reader hardware.
Using
smartphones can also simplify the integration of biometric technologies.
"Rather than having to add biometric capture devices in or alongside
readers, the phone itself can easily be used as a capture device for face or
voice (or both), with comparison and matching done locally on the phone or
centrally," said Mahdi. "This approach also mitigates the risks from
an attacker who gains possession of a person's phone."
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