Getting smart about identity

By Vivian Yeo, ZDNet Asia
Tuesday, December 13, 2005 03:36 PM

Alex Mandl, president and CEO of Gemplus

newsmaker From completing multimillion-dollar acquisitions to creating new regional posts, smart card maker Gemplus has orchestrated a string of moves to gear itself for expanding its business in the growing security and identity market.

In June, the smart card player finalized its acquisition of Setec Oy, a Finnish company specializing in the field of security and identity solutions. The alliance is seen as a booster to Gemplus' foray into the e-passport arena, as Setec services a number of governments, particularly in Europe.

Closer to the region, Gemplus appointed Martin McCourt as its president for Asia, and subsequently roped in Suzanne Tong-Li, a former executive of rival Axalto, as its president for China. Both positions were newly-created, to provide a more regional-based reporting model, according to Gemplus President and CEO Alex Mandl.

In April 2005, the Luxembourg-based company scored its first e-passport win in Asia when it secured the rights to supply contactless chip technology and supporting systems to the Immigration & Checkpoints Authority of Singapore for use in biometric passports.

ZDNet Asia caught up with Mandl during his visit to Singapore, to find out about the company's plans for Asia and his views on a claim that smart chip and PIN technology make identity theft easier.

Gemplus has made a few announcements specific to the Asia-Pacific region over the last several months. What can we make of that?
The changes indicate continued effort and investment, and focus on making sure that our position and participation in Asia is consistent with our expectations.

Our expectations are pretty straight forward--we believe that if you want to be a global leader in the business, you need to also be the leader in Asia. We happen to believe that Asia is the fastest growing segment around the globe in (the smart card) business, and therefore we want to continue to strengthen and refine our resources to make sure we fully participate in the growth opportunities.

We have shifted more towards a regional [reporting] model, driven by the fact that with a regional model the ability to respond to customer needs and requirements are better--you have your resources right there and can respond from a regional perspective without going back to the home base.

How do you manage the challenges that the region presents, given its diverse nature?
It's really no different from the rest of the world. If you look at Europe, there are very different economies. Every part of the world has very different marketplaces and demands.

The SIM card is very different in one place compared to another place. In some parts of the world, it's a very simple, low-capacity device serving a basic need of authentication, whereas in other places, the SIM card is a large megabyte platform for operators to bring their applications to their customers, with dramatically different product, service, support and innovation requirements, and so on. Our markets vary significantly from country to country, operator to operator, in every place we do business.

What are the key drivers of growth for Gemplus in the smart card market?
The largest part of the business today is the wireless SIM card market. Different markets have different requirements, but as wireless is one of the key growth drivers in the communications media world, the SIM card grows with that, since 80 percent of the global networks are GSM networks. GSM networks require the SIM card, so that drives a lot of inherent growth.

As bank credit cards and bank services migrate from magnetic strip cards to a chip-based card for security, application or convenience reasons, that migration is also a very important growth driver. To be fair, that migration today is mostly taking place in Europe,


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Save to my library  Save to My Library  
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Hands-on programming: Extract plain text from documents with Syncfusion's components

Web Development

Justin James recently tried Syncfusion's Essential DocIO and Essential PDF to help him extract text from documents he downloaded from the Internet. Here's the code he wrote to get the plain text.


Read more »


Will technology divide us further?

Blog thumbnail

So I finally watched 2012 over the weekend, but the film left me feeling extremely agitated.

The possibility that the world may meet its watery end in three years didn't..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »

Tech Jobs Now!


Tags

  1. authentication and encryption
  2. business security
  3. data protection
  4. data security
  5. e - mail
  6. financial
  7. internet
  8. malware
  9. network
  10. network security
  11. pc security
  12. security
  13. security applications / tools
  14. security implementation / standards
  15. security management
  16. software
  17. symantec corp.
  18. web
  19. web site