Depending upon your background, the fact that I’ve appeared in Biometric Update twice may or may not be a big deal to you. But I’m happy about it.
Biometric Update is a Canadian-based publication that…um…self-identifies as follows:
“We provide the world’s leading news coverage and information on the global biometric technology market via the web and an exclusive daily newsletter. Our daily biometrics updates, industry perspectives, interviews, columns and in-depth features explore a broad range of modalities and methods, from fingerprint, voice, iris, and facial recognition, to cutting-edge technologies like DNA analysis and gait recognition, related identification tools such as behavioral biometrics, and non-biometric identification methods such as identity document verification and telephone forensics. Our coverage touches on all applications and issues dealt with in the sector, including national security, mobile identity, and border control, with a special emphasis on UN Sustainable Development Goal 16.9 to provide universal digital identification and the ID4Africa movement.”
Over the last ten years, there have been two instances in which I have been newsworthy.
2015 with MorphoTrak
The first occurred in 2015, when my then-employer MorphoTrak exhibited an airport gate called MorphoWay at a conference then known as connect:ID. At the 2015 show, I demonstrated MorphoWay for Biometric Update’s videographer.
“In the video, Bredehoft scans his passport through the document reader, which checks the passport against a database to verify that it is, in fact, a CBP-authorized document.
“Once verified, the gates automatically open to allow Bredehoft to exit the area.”
2025 with Bredemarket
The second occurred ten years later in 2025, when I wrote a guest opinion piece entitled “Opinion: Vendors must disclose responsible uses of biometric data.” As I previously mentioned, I discussed the need to obtain consent for use of biometric data in certain instances, and noted:
“Some government agencies, private organizations, and biometric vendors have well-established procedures for acquiring the necessary consents.
“Others? Well…”
Biometric Update didn’t create a video this time around, but I did.
2035???
So now that I’ve established a regular cadence for my appearances in Biometric Update, I fully expect to make a third appearance in 2035.
Because of my extensive biometric background, I predict that my 2035 appearance will concern the use of quantum computing to distinguish between a person and their fabricated clone using QCID (quantum clone identification).
No video yet, because I don’t know what video technology will be like ten years from now. So here’s an old fashioned 2D picture.

