ROC rang the Nasdaq’s closing bell on Thursday as it ushered in a new post-IPO era, positioning its facial recognition and computer vision software as offering a sovereign American approach to vision AI and identity infrastructure.
CEO B. Scott Swan told Cheddar that part of the company’s plans include moving from selling software components to a “full suite of capabilities” on a single platform that combines “all of the biometrics, all of the video analytics, all of the digital evidence.” He pointed out that airports will be the main target market for the Republic of China going forward.
The company raised $24 million in its first major biometrics IPO of 2026. Since then, the company’s stock has risen from its IPO price of $6 per share to about $6.68 in Tuesday afternoon trading, after peaking above $7 last week.
Three evaluations of iBeta’s Level 2 Biometric Presentation Attack Detection (PAD) technology were completed in March.
Digital identities created with the open source MOSIP platform are being used by a growing number of people across a growing society.
New biometric training data and open source fingerprint quality assessment software released by NIST and…
Digital public infrastructure is also demonstrating its benefits on the ground. DPI may have started as an abstract policy, but countries…
Brazil’s data watchdog has published interim guidelines on the implementation of age-verified technologies that restrict the use of products and services by underage users. …
House Republicans reinstated the federal Child Online Safety Act, but…