Gun Safe · Gun Safe lock

New smart gun technology uses fingerprint recognition to childproof firearms

Omer Kiyani was on a leadership path at a large Detroit automobile company but he was so bothered by stories about teen suicides using guns and accidental shooting deaths that he instead chose to focus on developing his own solution to address the problem. His take on smart gun technology — Identilock — was on display this week at the Shooting, Hunting and Outdoor Trade Show, or SHOT Show.

“I’m a parent and a gun owner,” said Kiyani, who came up with the concept eight years ago. “I wanted something to protect my children from the gun I bought to protect them.”

The Identilock is a trigger lock device that uses fingerprint recognition to childproof a firearm.

Expanding research and development of authorized user recognition technology, often referred to as personalized or smart guns, was a big part of the executive actions President Barack Obama announced earlier this month, but the firearms community has been skeptical of smart gun platforms since their inception in the late 1990s.

The Identilock may prove to be a more palatable option for resistant gun owners, because the device would allow one to adapt the technology to the guns they already own.

The Identilock is roughly the size of a man’s palm and fits over the trigger of pistols (and a few long guns). It recognizes up to nine different fingerprints, from either different fingers or people, on a square window about twice the size of the biometric sensor on most smartphones.

Although it would be virtually impossible to force the Identilock off a gun using household tools — it would take hundreds of pounds of force — Kiyani said his device isn’t an anti-theft measure. It’s all about the children.

Worth_OmerKiyani_0083_final_web

“I see a picture of a kid who shot themselves, and it blows my mind,” Kiyani said. “I have a solution.”

Kiyani said it’s up to every parent who owns a gun to make sure their children are educated in gun safe, and he has made sure his are.

“But I can never guarantee their friends and whatnot,” he said.

Obama announced a series of actions aimed at reducing gun violence earlier this month, including an instruction for federal agencies to invest in the research and development of smart gun technology.

“If we can set it up so you can’t unlock your phone unless you’ve got the right fingerprint, why can’t we do the same thing for our guns?” Obama said on Jan. 5. “If a child can’t open a bottle of aspirin, we should make sure that they can’t pull a trigger on a gun.”

Smart gun technology has been around in some form or another since the late 1990s. Models use fingerprint recognition or a transmitter device within a watch, bracelet or ring to unlock the trigger mechanisms in a gun.

Gun owners have had concerns over the safety and reliability of smart guns in addition to worries about mandates involving the technology, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the trade group that presents the SHOT Show.

They worry that fingerprints can’t work if the hand is covered in blood, saying the gun would be unusable at the time when a gun owner needs it most. Many of the smart guns that have been developed also rely on batteries, which could again put a gun owner in danger if they lose their charge at a bad time.

Kiyani said his lock has solved many of the problems that concern people.

Of course it won’t work if someone is covered in blood, he said, but that person could just wipe a hand on a shirt or something else, and it would. One skeptical reviewer stood at his booth and tried the fingerprint lock 75 times Tuesday, and it worked every time, Kiyani noted.

The Identilock also comes with a key as a failsafe. And the battery on the lock lasts for 180 days on one charge.

Worries about smart gun mandates stem from a 2002 New Jersey law that said all of the guns sold in that state had to be smart guns within three years of a feasible model going on the market.

Fallout from that law — which is still on the books because Republican Gov. Chris Christie, who is running for president, this week let a bill that would have changed it die by failing to sign it — has been a serious problem for smart gun innovators.

Instead of encouraging the technology, backfire from the New Jersey mandate created a hostile environment.

The Washington Post detailed the story of the Armatix iP1 pistol, which unlocked when paired with a watch. After gun stores in California and Maryland were about to start carrying the smart gun a few years ago, those involved began to receive death threats.

Engage Armament in Rockville, Maryland, and The Oak Tree Gun Club near Los Angeles had signed on to carry the smart gun but became targets of a vehement backlash from gun enthusiasts, according to the Washington Post.

There were hundreds of protests on the stores’ Facebook pages and online forums, and the owner of Engage Armament released a long video on his Facebook page, saying he had received death threats and would not sell the gun. It has also been reported that people had threatened to burn down Engage Armament.

Kiyani said he had a good reception at SHOT Show in spite of the controversy surrounding the technology.

“My booth has been full,” he said. “We have no resistance because we’re right in the middle.”

Still, Kiyani was afraid to disclose much about himself to the Review-Journal out of fear of becoming a target himself.

Identilock starts at $319. Kiyani said he is still looking for distribution partners, but getidentilock.com appeared to be taking orders online Friday.

The SHOT Show is the Sands Expo’s largest show — with more than 13 acres of floor space, on multiple levels, 12.5 miles of booths and more than 1,600 exhibitors. More than 60,000 people are in town for the show, which ended Friday.

The Review-Journal is owned by the Adelson family, majority owners of Sands Expo and Convention Center operator Las Vegas Sands Corp.

Gun Safe · Gun Safe lock

IDENTILOCK Smart Gun Lock – Answers President Obama’s Call for a Smart Gun

After three years of development, the IDENTILOCK smart gun lock will be available for online purchase on Jan. 6th, 2016 5 PM ET.

The revolutionary device, produced by Sentinl, uses fingerprint technology to allow split-second access to a gun only for authorized users.

IDENTILOCK clamps to the firearm, preventing access until activated by the authorized fingerprint. Multiple sets of fingerprints can be authorized to unlock the gun, allowing access to trusted users. Designed for versatility and to fit virtually every gun, a full list of compatible firearms is available online here.

Handgun+Safe

“IDENTILOCK is a solution that allows responsible firearm owners to protect themselves and their families at the same time,” said IDENTILOCK inventor Omer Kiyani.

Kiyani, a Detroit-based automotive safety engineer, whose advisers include Tom Lasorda, former CEO of Chrysler, enlisted a multi-disciplined team of designers and engineers to create a safety mechanism that allows instant gun access while prioritizing reliability. IDENTILOCK’s technology includes fingerprint authentication similar to the iPhone 6.

IDENTILOCK’s latching mechanism uses technology NASA’s chose for Mars Rover to create a device able to withstand hundreds of pounds of physical force.

The device… expends a half a year’s worth of battery life before needing recharging. All design and manufacturing takes place in Detroit and IDENTILOCK is built on the same assembly lines used by major automotive OEMs.

“As a gun owner myself, I understand how IDENTILOCK must be completely reliable,” he said. “Through my own expertise and network, I’ve incorporated only the most advanced technology designed by the nation’s best safety engineers to create a product that works effectively, every time.”

Kiyani created IDENTILOCK by winning Smart Tech Challenges Foundation Firearms Challenge – a Silicon Valley- based gun safety organization cofounded by Ron Conway, and the backing of IncWell venture capital firm. As a gunshot survivor, he said IDENTILOCK is a product everyone can get behind.

“I wanted to create a simple solution that everyone can get behind. Gun owners are most compelled to reduce accidents related to firearms. I knew IDENTILOCK couldn’t be built in a garage, so I got backing of industry giants.”

The device costs $319 and is available for purchase online, with an expected delivery date in summer 2016. IDENTILOCK achieved a major milestone in American history by being the first ever Gun Safety Technology Startup to exhibit at CES 2016 Jan. 6-9. In addition it will also be exhibiting at SHOT Show 2016 Jan. 19-22 2016 in Las Vegas.

To purchase and for additional information visit www.GetIdentilock.com. https://www.facebook.com/identilock

Gun Safe · Gun Safe lock · Uncategorized

A Biometric Gun Lock That Even the NRA Might Like

Omer Kiyani’s hands still shake when he remembers the day that changed the course of his life.

He was 16 years old, riding in a car with a group of friends, when someone started firing a gun outside the car. Kiyani — who never identified the shooter and has trouble remembering the incident — was shot in the mouth. After several surgeries, his physical problems faded away, but the shooting left an indelible impression on his psyche.

Yes, he believes in making guns safer, but he’s not your typical safety advocate. He’s a gun owner himself, and he wants to control firearms in the most practical of ways. That’s why he founded Sentinl, a Detroit-based startup that’s designing a biometric gun lock called Identilock. Attaching to a gun’s trigger, it unlocks only when the owner applies a fingerprint. Now that he’s a father, Kiyani says, he’s even more motivated to keep guns out of the wrong hands and prevent his kids from having to go through the trauma he experienced. “I understand what can happen when you’re on the wrong side of a firearm,” he explains.

‘I understand what can happen when you’re on the wrong side of a firearm.’

Gun control has been a contentious issue for decades, but these days, things are about as divisive as they can get. As a recent Pew Research survey shows, the American public is almost completely split on the issue, with 50 percent of Americans saying gun control is more important than gun rights, and 48 percent saying the opposite. The debate is playing out in political arenas around the country. Just weeks after former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg pledged $50 million to gun control initiatives, Georgia governor Nathan Deal signed the so-called “guns everywhere” law, which allows Georgia residents to carry guns in churches, schools, and even parts of airports.

Introducing any type of innovation into an industry so ripe with controversy and partisan politics has traditionally been a nearly insurmountable task. A company called Armatix — one of the brightest lights in the gun safety arena — recently developed a smart gun that authorizes the user by connecting to a radio frequency-enabled stopwatch, but as The New York Times points out, the company has found it nearly impossible to overcome gun rights lobbyists, who say technology like that could cause the gun to malfunction.

Nonetheless, Kiyani believes even gun rights activists will be more amenable to the Identilock, and he’s not entirely crazy for thinking so.

From Air Bags to Guns

An engineer by training, Kiyani spent years working as a software developer building next-generation airbag systems. He worked on calibrating the systems to minimize the chance of injury in the event of an accident, and eventually, he realized he could apply the same basic concepts to guns. “The idea of an airbag is so simple. You inflate it and can save a life,” he says. “I made the connection. I have something in my house that’s very dangerous. There’s got to be a simple way to protect it.”

Initially, Kiyani considered technology that would require installing electronic locking equipment into the guns themselves. But as an engineer, he also understood the inherent complications of designing electronics that could withstand tremendous shock and high temperatures. “Think of the average electronic lock on a door,” Kiyani explains. “Now imagine every time it’s opened, it gets 30 some blows with a huge hammer.” To develop that type of expertise — and to ensure it would work without fail — would have taken Kiyani time and money he didn’t have, not to mention how insanely difficult it would be to convince gun manufacturers to work with him. So he built something that anyone could add to a gun.

His creation is different in three ways: it’s optional, it’s detachable, and it’s quick. Unlike biometric gun safe and other locking mechanisms, Kiyani says, the Identilock makes it as easy to access a firearm as it is to unlock an iPhone. He pitched hundreds of gun owners a variety of ideas over the course of his research, but it was the biometric lock they inevitably latched onto. “That was the key motivator for moving forward,” Kiyani remembers. “As I kept talking to people, not only did the idea get refined, but it was clear people wanted it.”

Today, the Identilock is designed using entirely off-the-shelf components that have been proven effective in other industries. The biometric sensor, for example, has been used in other security applications and is approved by the FBI. Cobbling the sensor together from existing technologies was both a cost-saving endeavor and a strategic way to prove the product’s effectiveness more quickly. “If I were to go out and get one black eye, that would be it,” Kiyani says. “The goal was to take something that has already been validated, not have to reinvent the wheel.”

Beyond the Prototype

The product is still very much in its prototype phase, and Kiyani expects the technology may change as the Identilock goes through a pilot program with local law enforcement loosely slated for later this year. And yet, even the prototype has earned Kiyani notice from some leaders in the field. The Smart Tech Foundation, for one, invited him to take part in the announcement of its Smart Tech for Firearms Challenge. Backed by the likes of famed angel investor Ron Conway and serial entrepreneur Jim Pitkow, the challenge is offering up $1 million in prize and development money to people working on technology to make guns safer. The Identilock is currently one of about 200 applicants in the running.

“I think they’ve provided a really simple approach that anyone could use, regardless of whether or not they’re familiar with technology,” says Pitkow, who believes that because the Identilock is a gun accessory, and not part of the gun, Kiyani can avoid the challenges that have derailed similar technology. “The technologies that don’t require existing manufacturers’ participation will have a lot less friction getting to market.”

Kiyani knows he’s bound to face opposition in the firearm marketplace, but he’s hoping that his light-handed approach will win the Identilock support from gun rights, as well as gun control, activists. “The ultimate win,” he says, “would be when the manufacturers choose to package a gun with this. That would be the ultimate success.”

To purchase and for additional information visit getidentilock.com. https://www.facebook.com/identilock

Gun Safe · Gun Safe lock · Uncategorized

Identilock Smart Gun Technology

Smart guns are at the front of the gun industry’s mind right now. This is due in large part to Obama’s recent order that the Department of Defense, Justice Department, and Department of Homeland Security must come up with a viable plan to speed along the progress of smart gun technology. In the wake of Obama’s executive order announcements at the beginning of January 2016, a company by the name of Sentinl took it upon themselves to make a big announcement: they just happened to have a product coming out of R and D capable of fulfilling Obama’s request.

car.jpg

The new product is called Identilock and it isn’t a gun but a technologically advanced trigger lock. The maker of this new product – a product being hailed by mainstream media as the potential answer to many problems – is a man by the name of Omer Kiyani. Kiyani is an engineer living in Detroit who got his start as a software developer for airbags. He has apparently been working on the Identilock for three years. R and D was funded in part by a $100,000 grant from Conway’s Smart Tech Challenges Foundation. Kiyani says he is a gun owner and also that he was the victim of a drive-by shooting at the age of sixteen.

Identilock from Sentinl.

According to Sentinl, Identilock will fit a wide variety of firearms (see list at bottom of this post). It attaches to the gun’s trigger guard and is designed to be unlocked with a fingerprint. The biometric lock first began seeing widespread media coverage in 2014 in publications such as Wired (“A Biometric Gun Lock That Even the NRA Might Like”) and Geek (“Identilock Biometric Tech Unlocks A Gun In Under A Second”). CNN even covered it in March of 2014 on their website in “The High-Tech Guns That Know Who Is Firing Them: Can Smart Tech Make Firearms Safer?”.

The Identilock will be at SHOT Show next week and you can be sure I’ll be meeting with them.

Take a look at their website at http://getidentilock.com/

Guns the Identilock currently can be used on (this list is from Sentinl and has not been edited):

1911 Colt and clones

1911 Commander

1911 Government

Beretta 92/96/M9

Glock 17/19/20/21/22/23/26/27/31/32/33/36/37/46

Glock 42/43

Heckler & Koch 45C

Heckler & Koch P30

Heckler & Koch UPS

Kahr CW

Kahr PW

Mossberg 500/930

Remington 870/1100

Ruger P85

Ruger P89

S&W 4000

S&W 5906

Sig Sauer 2022

Sig Sauer 226 / 228 / 229

Sig Sauer 250 DC

Sig Sauer P220/P225/P226/P228/P229

Sig Sauer P238

Sig Sauer P250/P320/Pro 2022

Smith & Wesson M&P .357

Smith & Wesson M&P SD 9/.40 / Sigma

Smith & Wesson M&P Shield 9/.40

Springfield XD/XDS/XDM

Taurus 24/7

Taurus PT111 Millennium G2

 

Gun Safe · Gun Safe lock · Uncategorized

Identilock Is A Mobile Gun Lock That Keeps Firearms Secure

If a parent makes the choice to keep a firearm in their home, a key decision that follows should be how to keep the kids safe.

Launching today from CES 2016 Battlefield is Identilock, a smart gunlock that allows users to biometrically secure their gun and unlock it within a second at what their team claims is a 100% accuracy rate thanks to the company’s specialized IP.

The lock needs to be charged every six months or so due to the embedded fingerprint sensor, but can be unlocked via a physical key if your weapon is left lying dormant for longer.

Something important to gun owners investing in safety tech like locks or safes is the ability to quickly access their firearm when they need to. Bulky safes can slow down gun owners when they believe they need to access their weapon most.

“Mobility is essential [with Identilock]; it really secures the gun wherever you are,” Identilock inventor Omer Kiyani told TechCrunch.

The spring-loaded lock allows users to unlock the Identilock with their fingerprints while holding the grip of their weapon, at which point it falls right off the trigger guard, freeing the gun to be used immediately.

Yesterday, President Obama gave a speech urging government entities to invest time and research into smart gun technology, hoping that they would “conduct or sponsor research into gun safe technology that would reduce the frequency of accidental discharge or unauthorized use of firearms, and improve the tracing of lost or stolen guns.”

Kiyani, having been a victim of gun violence himself, felt particularly drawn to use his engineering background to tackle gun safety, and after the events that transpired at Sandy Hook, he decided to devote himself to starting this project.

“There are enough people in America that carry,” Kiyani said. “So that everybody needs to secure their firearm.”

Identilock has already received recognition after winning a grant from Ron Conway’s Smart Tech Foundation Challenge that sought to highlight up-and-coming gun safety tech. Kiyani tells me his lock is now the first-ever gun safety technology exhibiting at CES.

The Identilock is available now for pre-order online and Kiyani says the product is expected to ship this summer. It will retail for $319. Comfortability is always important to gun owners and Kiyani detailed that the company will be offering a 90-day return policy so that customers can test out the tech and see if it’s right for them.

Gun Safe lock

Identilock Is A Mobile Gun Lock That Keeps Firearms Secure

If a parent makes the choice to keep a firearm in their home, a key decision that follows should be how to keep the kids safe.

Launching today from CES 2016 Battlefield is Identilock, a smart gunlock that allows users to biometrically secure their gun and unlock it within a second at what their team claims is a 100% accuracy rate thanks to the company’s specialized IP.

421025-thumb-
Gun safe lock

The lock needs to be charged every six months or so due to the embedded fingerprint sensor, but can be unlocked via a physical key if your weapon is left lying dormant for longer.

Something important to gun owners investing in safety tech like locks or safes is the ability to quickly access their firearm when they need to. Bulky safes can slow down gun owners when they believe they need to access their weapon most.

“Mobility is essential [with Identilock]; it really secures the gun wherever you are,” Identilock inventor Omer Kiyani told TechCrunch.

The spring-loaded lock allows users to unlock the Identilock with their fingerprints while holding the grip of their weapon, at which point it falls right off the trigger guard, freeing the gun to be used immediately.

Yesterday, President Obama gave a speech urging government entities to invest time and research into smart gun technology, hoping that they would “conduct or sponsor research into gun safe technology that would reduce the frequency of accidental discharge or unauthorized use of firearms, and improve the tracing of lost or stolen guns.”

Kiyani, having been a victim of gun violence himself, felt particularly drawn to use his engineering background to tackle gun safety, and after the events that transpired at Sandy Hook, he decided to devote himself to starting this project.

“There are enough people in America that carry,” Kiyani said. “So that everybody needs to secure their firearm.”

Identilock has already received recognition after winning a grant from Ron Conway’s Smart Tech Foundation Challenge that sought to highlight up-and-coming gun safety tech. Kiyani tells me his lock is now the first-ever gun safety technology exhibiting at CES.

The Identilock is available now for pre-order online and Kiyani says the product is expected to ship this summer. It will retail for $319. Comfortability is always important to gun owners and Kiyani detailed that the company will be offering a 90-day return policy so that customers can test out the tech and see if it’s right for them.

Gun Safe

Identilock Smart Gun Technology

Smart guns are at the front of the gun industry’s mind right now. This is due in large part to Obama’s recent order that the Department of Defense, Justice Department, and Department of Homeland Security must come up with a viable plan to speed along the progress of smart gun technology. In the wake of Obama’s executive order announcements at the beginning of January 2016, a company by the name of Sentinl took it upon themselves to make a big announcement: they just happened to have a product coming out of R and D capable of fulfilling Obama’s request.

download (1)

The new product is called Identilock and it isn’t a gun but a technologically advanced trigger lock. The maker of this new product – a product being hailed by mainstream media as the potential answer to many problems – is a man by the name of Omer Kiyani. Kiyani is an engineer living in Detroit who got his start as a software developer for airbags. He has apparently been working on the Identilock for three years. R and D was funded in part by a $100,000 grant from Conway’s Smart Tech Challenges Foundation. Kiyani says he is a gun owner and also that he was the victim of a drive-by shooting at the age of sixteen.

Identilock from Sentinl.

According to Sentinl, Identilock will fit a wide variety of firearms (see list at bottom of this post). It attaches to the gun’s trigger guard and is designed to be unlocked with a fingerprint. The biometric lock first began seeing widespread media coverage in 2014 in publications such as Wired (“A Biometric Gun Lock That Even the NRA Might Like”) and Geek (“Identilock Biometric Tech Unlocks A Gun In Under A Second”). CNN even covered it in March of 2014 on their website in “The High-Tech Guns That Know Who Is Firing Them: Can Smart Tech Make Firearms Safer?”.

The Identilock will be at SHOT Show next week and you can be sure I’ll be meeting with them.

Take a look at their website at http://getidentilock.com/

Guns the Identilock currently can be used on (this list is from Sentinl and has not been edited):

1911 Colt and clones

1911 Commander

1911 Government

Beretta 92/96/M9

Glock 17/19/20/21/22/23/26/27/31/32/33/36/37/46

Glock 42/43

Heckler & Koch 45C

Heckler & Koch P30

Heckler & Koch UPS

Kahr CW

Kahr PW

Mossberg 500/930

Remington 870/1100

Ruger P85

Ruger P89

S&W 4000

S&W 5906

Sig Sauer 2022

Sig Sauer 226 / 228 / 229

Sig Sauer 250 DC

Sig Sauer P220/P225/P226/P228/P229

Sig Sauer P238

Sig Sauer P250/P320/Pro 2022

Smith & Wesson M&P .357

Smith & Wesson M&P SD 9/.40 / Sigma

Smith & Wesson M&P Shield 9/.40

Springfield XD/XDS/XDM

Taurus 24/7

Taurus PT111 Millennium G2

Gun Safe

A Biometric Gun Lock That Even the NRA Might Like

Omer Kiyani’s hands still shake when he remembers the day that changed the course of his life.

He was 16 years old, riding in a car with a group of friends, when someone started firing a gun outside the car. Kiyani — who never identified the shooter and has trouble remembering the incident — was shot in the mouth. After several surgeries, his physical problems faded away, but the shooting left an indelible impression on his psyche.

identilock1

Yes, he believes in making guns safer, but he’s not your typical safety advocate. He’s a gun owner himself, and he wants to control firearms in the most practical of ways. That’s why he founded Sentinl, a Detroit-based startup that’s designing a biometric gun lock called Identilock. Attaching to a gun’s trigger, it unlocks only when the owner applies a fingerprint. Now that he’s a father, Kiyani says, he’s even more motivated to keep guns out of the wrong hands and prevent his kids from having to go through the trauma he experienced. “I understand what can happen when you’re on the wrong side of a firearm,” he explains.

‘I understand what can happen when you’re on the wrong side of a firearm.’

Gun control has been a contentious issue for decades, but these days, things are about as divisive as they can get. As a recent Pew Research survey shows, the American public is almost completely split on the issue, with 50 percent of Americans saying gun control is more important than gun rights, and 48 percent saying the opposite. The debate is playing out in political arenas around the country. Just weeks after former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg pledged $50 million to gun control initiatives, Georgia governor Nathan Deal signed the so-called “guns everywhere” law, which allows Georgia residents to carry guns in churches, schools, and even parts of airports.

Introducing any type of innovation into an industry so ripe with controversy and partisan politics has traditionally been a nearly insurmountable task. A company called Armatix — one of the brightest lights in the gun safety arena — recently developed a smart gun that authorizes the user by connecting to a radio frequency-enabled stopwatch, but as The New York Times points out, the company has found it nearly impossible to overcome gun rights lobbyists, who say technology like that could cause the gun to malfunction.

Nonetheless, Kiyani believes even gun rights activists will be more amenable to the Identilock, and he’s not entirely crazy for thinking so.

From Air Bags to Guns

An engineer by training, Kiyani spent years working as a software developer building next-generation airbag systems. He worked on calibrating the systems to minimize the chance of injury in the event of an accident, and eventually, he realized he could apply the same basic concepts to guns. “The idea of an airbag is so simple. You inflate it and can save a life,” he says. “I made the connection. I have something in my house that’s very dangerous. There’s got to be a simple way to protect it.”

Initially, Kiyani considered technology that would require installing electronic locking equipment into the guns themselves. But as an engineer, he also understood the inherent complications of designing electronics that could withstand tremendous shock and high temperatures. “Think of the average electronic lock on a door,” Kiyani explains. “Now imagine every time it’s opened, it gets 30 some blows with a huge hammer.” To develop that type of expertise — and to ensure it would work without fail — would have taken Kiyani time and money he didn’t have, not to mention how insanely difficult it would be to convince gun manufacturers to work with him. So he built something that anyone could add to a gun.

His creation is different in three ways: it’s optional, it’s detachable, and it’s quick. Unlike biometric gun safe and other locking mechanisms, Kiyani says, the Identilock makes it as easy to access a firearm as it is to unlock an iPhone. He pitched hundreds of gun owners a variety of ideas over the course of his research, but it was the biometric lock they inevitably latched onto. “That was the key motivator for moving forward,” Kiyani remembers. “As I kept talking to people, not only did the idea get refined, but it was clear people wanted it.”

Today, the Identilock is designed using entirely off-the-shelf components that have been proven effective in other industries. The biometric sensor, for example, has been used in other security applications and is approved by the FBI. Cobbling the sensor together from existing technologies was both a cost-saving endeavor and a strategic way to prove the product’s effectiveness more quickly. “If I were to go out and get one black eye, that would be it,” Kiyani says. “The goal was to take something that has already been validated, not have to reinvent the wheel.”

Beyond the Prototype

The product is still very much in its prototype phase, and Kiyani expects the technology may change as the Identilock goes through a pilot program with local law enforcement loosely slated for later this year. And yet, even the prototype has earned Kiyani notice from some leaders in the field. The Smart Tech Foundation, for one, invited him to take part in the announcement of its Smart Tech for Firearms Challenge. Backed by the likes of famed angel investor Ron Conway and serial entrepreneur Jim Pitkow, the challenge is offering up $1 million in prize and development money to people working on technology to make guns safer. The Identilock is currently one of about 200 applicants in the running.

“I think they’ve provided a really simple approach that anyone could use, regardless of whether or not they’re familiar with technology,” says Pitkow, who believes that because the Identilock is a gun accessory, and not part of the gun, Kiyani can avoid the challenges that have derailed similar technology. “The technologies that don’t require existing manufacturers’ participation will have a lot less friction getting to market.”

Kiyani knows he’s bound to face opposition in the firearm marketplace, but he’s hoping that his light-handed approach will win the Identilock support from gun rights, as well as gun control, activists. “The ultimate win,” he says, “would be when the manufacturers choose to package a gun with this. That would be the ultimate success.”

To purchase and for additional information visit getidentilock.com. https://www.facebook.com/identilock

Gun Safe

New smart gun technology uses fingerprint recognition to childproof firearms

Omer Kiyani was on a leadership path at a large Detroit automobile company but he was so bothered by stories about teen suicides using guns and accidental shooting deaths that he instead chose to focus on developing his own solution to address the problem. His take on smart gun technology — Identilock — was on display this week at the Shooting, Hunting and Outdoor Trade Show, or SHOT Show.

“I’m a parent and a gun owner,” said Kiyani, who came up with the concept eight years ago. “I wanted something to protect my children from the gun I bought to protect them.”

The Identilock is a trigger lock device that uses fingerprint recognition to childproof a firearm.

Expanding research and development of authorized user recognition technology, often referred to as personalized or smart guns, was a big part of the executive actions President Barack Obama announced earlier this month, but the firearms community has been skeptical of smart gun platforms since their inception in the late 1990s.

Handgun+Safe

The Identilock may prove to be a more palatable option for resistant gun owners, because the device would allow one to adapt the technology to the guns they already own.

The Identilock is roughly the size of a man’s palm and fits over the trigger of pistols (and a few long guns). It recognizes up to nine different fingerprints, from either different fingers or people, on a square window about twice the size of the biometric sensor on most smartphones.

Although it would be virtually impossible to force the Identilock off a gun using household tools — it would take hundreds of pounds of force — Kiyani said his device isn’t an anti-theft measure. It’s all about the children.

“I see a picture of a kid who shot themselves, and it blows my mind,” Kiyani said. “I have a solution.”

Kiyani said it’s up to every parent who owns a gun to make sure their children are educated in gun safe, and he has made sure his are.

“But I can never guarantee their friends and whatnot,” he said.

Obama announced a series of actions aimed at reducing gun violence earlier this month, including an instruction for federal agencies to invest in the research and development of smart gun technology.

“If we can set it up so you can’t unlock your phone unless you’ve got the right fingerprint, why can’t we do the same thing for our guns?” Obama said on Jan. 5. “If a child can’t open a bottle of aspirin, we should make sure that they can’t pull a trigger on a gun.”

Smart gun technology has been around in some form or another since the late 1990s. Models use fingerprint recognition or a transmitter device within a watch, bracelet or ring to unlock the trigger mechanisms in a gun.

Gun owners have had concerns over the safety and reliability of smart guns in addition to worries about mandates involving the technology, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the trade group that presents the SHOT Show.

They worry that fingerprints can’t work if the hand is covered in blood, saying the gun would be unusable at the time when a gun owner needs it most. Many of the smart guns that have been developed also rely on batteries, which could again put a gun owner in danger if they lose their charge at a bad time.

Kiyani said his lock has solved many of the problems that concern people.

Of course it won’t work if someone is covered in blood, he said, but that person could just wipe a hand on a shirt or something else, and it would. One skeptical reviewer stood at his booth and tried the fingerprint lock 75 times Tuesday, and it worked every time, Kiyani noted.

The Identilock also comes with a key as a failsafe. And the battery on the lock lasts for 180 days on one charge.

Worries about smart gun mandates stem from a 2002 New Jersey law that said all of the guns sold in that state had to be smart guns within three years of a feasible model going on the market.

Fallout from that law — which is still on the books because Republican Gov. Chris Christie, who is running for president, this week let a bill that would have changed it die by failing to sign it — has been a serious problem for smart gun innovators.

Instead of encouraging the technology, backfire from the New Jersey mandate created a hostile environment.

The Washington Post detailed the story of the Armatix iP1 pistol, which unlocked when paired with a watch. After gun stores in California and Maryland were about to start carrying the smart gun a few years ago, those involved began to receive death threats.

Engage Armament in Rockville, Maryland, and The Oak Tree Gun Club near Los Angeles had signed on to carry the smart gun but became targets of a vehement backlash from gun enthusiasts, according to the Washington Post.

There were hundreds of protests on the stores’ Facebook pages and online forums, and the owner of Engage Armament released a long video on his Facebook page, saying he had received death threats and would not sell the gun. It has also been reported that people had threatened to burn down Engage Armament.

Kiyani said he had a good reception at SHOT Show in spite of the controversy surrounding the technology.

“My booth has been full,” he said. “We have no resistance because we’re right in the middle.”

Still, Kiyani was afraid to disclose much about himself to the Review-Journal out of fear of becoming a target himself.

Identilock starts at $319. Kiyani said he is still looking for distribution partners, but getidentilock.com appeared to be taking orders online Friday.

The SHOT Show is the Sands Expo’s largest show — with more than 13 acres of floor space, on multiple levels, 12.5 miles of booths and more than 1,600 exhibitors. More than 60,000 people are in town for the show, which ended Friday.

The Review-Journal is owned by the Adelson family, majority owners of Sands Expo and Convention Center operator Las Vegas Sands Corp.