Montreal Startup Wants To Solve Identity Theft
Saturday, February 9th, 2008Cryptographer and entrepreneur Stefan Brands runs Credentica, a Montreal-based startup that is rolling out an encryption-and-authentication system called U-Prove that allows users to disclose the absolute minimum to complete digital transactions — and to do so in a way that ensures the information they need to reveal has no shelf life whatsoever.
“By protecting privacy, you can actually enhance security,” Brands says. “My goal is to get the best of both worlds.”
Maintaining digital privacy and security has never been more important. As more and more people trust their personal information to electronic databases, security and privacy are plummeting. More than 79 million personal electronic records containing data like credit card and Social Security numbers were compromised in the United States last year — almost four times the number reported in 2006, according to the San Diego-based Identity Theft Resource Center. And more than 162 million such records were compromised globally, more than three times 2006 levels, according to Attrition.org.


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