Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity...

21
Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? Maarten Wegdam, Novay European Identity Conference 2011 12 May 2011, Munich

description

As presented at the European Identity Conference 2011, on 12 May 2011

Transcript of Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity...

Page 1: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks?Maarten Wegdam, Novay

European Identity Conference 201112 May 2011, Munich

Page 2: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Novay?

• Independent Dutch ICT research institute• Formerly Telematica Instituut• “People driven, ICT empowered”• ~55 researchers, multi-disciplinary• Innovation projects• Including financial sector, government and semi-

government

2

Page 3: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Old problem

3

[New Yorker cartoon by Peter Steiner]

Page 4: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

What to expect?

• Re-usable identities are the way to go

• Government vs trust framework: they co-exist

• Banks and government are key

• Convincing relying parties: needed and hard work

4

Page 5: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Identity in the offline world

5

Page 6: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

And online?

6

Id theft Avoidable costsLost revenues (?)

Frustrated users Privacy/control issues

Page 7: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Solution: re-usable identities

7

(One or) a few trusted identities

Of course: secure & trusted

Of course: user controlled, privacy sensitive

Page 8: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Trust in an identity

8

Authenticationmeans

Identity binding

Level of Assurance

Page 9: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Challenges for trusted re-usable identities

9

lack of trust in Id Provider

privacy issues

market entry

issues

Page 10: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

The big choice: government or market as identity provider

• Government – as in offline world

• Market – as phone, internet access, email etc

10

Page 11: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

• Government – as in offline world

• Market – as phone, internet access, email etc

• Some form of controlled market

The big choice: government or market as identity provider

11

Page 12: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

12

Decreasing (government) control

Note: models 1 to 3 require some form of monopoly or regulator

Government issued

Government regulated

Trust framework

Free market (tech standard)

Page 13: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

To have more trust and a healthy ecosystem• A fair business model• New identity providers can join• Easy access for relying parties (scalability)• Balancing interests between players• Privacy assurances• Governance / audits• Support one or more levels of assurance

13

Identity trust framework = a set of rules that all players agree upon

Page 14: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Success criteria C2B/C2G identity

• Frequent use of eID essential

• For private AND public services (C2B & C2G)

• Bank involvement seems key

• Government governance required

• Easy entrance for relying parties

• Ease of use for end-users

• High (100%?) user penetration needed[based on use cases study in DK,BE.DE,NO,SE,EE,US in 2010]

14

Page 15: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

15

Easier market entry• 100% user coverage• gov as relying partyClearer bus modelNeutral brandingPrivacy of Relying party

Innovation ‘friendlier’User choiceInternational is easier (?)Benefits of competition …Re-use existing identities

Trust: cultural?User privacy: one big brother or several medium brothers?

Government issued eID Identity trust framework

Page 16: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

use-case: trusted and re-usable consumer identity in NL

16

ConsortiumFinancial sectorVision on trust frameworkFeasibility

Page 17: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

vision on trust framework

• Business model – users should not pay (directly)• Business case – re-use existing identities• Very easy for relying parties to connect• Several levels of assurance – ‘mid’ trust and up• Mobile – from the start• Privacy – state-of-the-art and consent• Government needed for trust (link to eRecognition)

17

Page 18: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

: my lessons learned

• High-level mngt in financial industry do not understand nerdy terms like trust frameworks

• Government needs to be ‘predictable’ !!!• Relying parties: so they don’t wait for gov• Identity providers: trust & no competition

• Re-use existing & trusted: you need (all ?) banks as identity providers

• not core business, there are risks, and unclear business case ...

18

Page 19: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

My 2 cents for relying parties

• Re-use identities from others when you can• Heterogeneity - no 1-identity-to-rule-them all, accept

heterogeneity as inevitable• Stimulate trust frameworks - it is in your interest to

reduce heterogeneity without introducing a monopoly• Architect your identity system to accept different

levels of assurance, from different parties

• If you have customers from only one nation, can wait a couple of years and live in a government-issued C2B eID country: things may be simpler.

19

Page 20: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

5 things to keep an eye on

1. Will social login (Facebook etc) become more trustworthy?

2. Will domain-specific trust frameworks expand, e.g. higher education?

3. Are four levels-of-assurance (trust levels) really needed? Will users understand?

4. What is the value of an authentication for a relying party? (BankID is pretty cheap …)

5. Are trust frameworks also about trusting the relying parties?

20

Page 21: Consumer and Citizen Identities: Government Issued or Trust Frameworks? (European Identity Conference 2011)

Take aways

• Re-usable identities are the way to go• If both C2B and C2G: easier market entry, cheaper

• Government vs trust framework: they co-exist• Privacy, political, legacy, legislation are factors

• Banks and government are key• Market penetration as identity providers

• Killer apps as relying parties

• Trust

• Convincing relying parties: needed and hard work

21

More information:[email protected] http://maarten.wegdam.name