Malaysia Biometric Passport
A biometric passport, also known as an e-passport, ePassport or a digital
passport, is a combined paper and electronic passport that contains biometric
information that can be used to authenticate the identity of travelers. It uses
contactless smart card technology, including a microprocessor chip (computer
chip) and antenna (for both power to the chip and communication) embedded in the
front or back cover, or center page, of the passport.
Document and chip characteristics are documented in the International Civil
Aviation Organisation's (ICAO) Doc 9303. The passport's critical information is
both printed on the data page of the passport and stored in the chip. Public Key
Infrastructure (PKI) is used to authenticate the data stored electronically in
the passport chip making it expensive and difficult to forge when all security
mechanisms are fully and correctly implemented.
Malaysia was the first country in the world to issue biometric passports in
1998, after a local company, IRIS Corporation, developed the technology.
Malaysia is however not a member of the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) and its
biometric passport does not conform to the same standards as the VWP biometric
document because the Malaysian biometric passport was issued ahead of the VWP
requirement.
The difference lies in the storage of fingerprint template instead of
fingerprint image in the chip, the rest of the technologies are the same. Also
the biometric passport was designed to be read only if the receiving country has
the authorization from the Malaysian Immigration Department. Malaysia started
issuing ICAO compliant passports from February 2010.
The currently standardized biometrics used for this type of identification
system are facial recognition, fingerprint recognition, and iris recognition.
These were adopted after assessment of several different kinds of biometrics
including retinal scan. The ICAO defines the biometric file formats and
communication protocols to be used in passports.
Only the digital image (usually in JPEG or JPEG2000 format) of each biometric
feature is actually stored in the chip. The comparison of biometric features is
performed outside the passport chip by electronic border control systems
(e-borders).
To store biometric data on the contactless chip, it includes a minimum of 32
kilobytes of EEPROM storage memory, and runs on an interface in accordance with
the ISO/IEC 14443 international standard, amongst others. These standards intend
interoperability between different countries and different manufacturers of
passport books.
Some national identity cards (e.g. in the Netherlands, Albania and Brazil) are
fully ICAO9303 compliant biometric travel documents. However others, such as the
USA Passport card, are not.
For further inquiries, please call Immigration Operation Center in Putrajaya at
+603-8000 8000 (MOCC) or +603-8880 1555 (Operation Room) or contact Malaysia Immigration
Department nearest to you.
undo Malaysia Passport