Brussels agrees pan-European ID standard

Eugen Leitl eugen at leitl.org
Thu Nov 12 03:31:07 PST 2009


(this just on the heels of giving US full access to all internal financial
transactions)

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/11/11/europeanwide_id_plan/

Brussels agrees pan-European ID standard

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STORK sallies forth

By John Oates b" Get more from this author

Posted in Government, 11th November 2009 13:06 GMT


The planned universal electronic identity for all European citizens has moved
a step closer - the technical interoperability standard has been agreed.

The full details will be unveiled 18 November at a conference in Malmo. But
following a 14-country, 12-month trial, Brussels has agreed a common
specification.

The project, which breaks every rule of acronym club, is called STORK -
Secure idenTity acrOss boRders linKed.

In essence the scheme will allow you to use your UK electronic identity, for
example, if you needed to access an electronic government service in any
other member state. So once you have a guaranteed identity to get into the UK
Government Gateway you could use it to pay French property taxes or a Spanish
speeding fine.

The UK side of the project is run by the Identity and Passport Service -
although it makes clear STORK has nothing to do with ID cards or the National
Identity Register.

STORK's Miguel Alvarez Rodriguez said, as reported by PublicTechnology.net:
bThe main objective now is to test the model in real-time, with real people.
Usability is critical to the success of the framework, so during the pilots
we are expecting to refine and improve elements where necessary.

"Although it was a key factor in the conceptual design, scalability is also a
challenge to be addressed in any future extensions of the project.b

There are five projects in the next stage:

- Providing universal access to some British, Belgium, Austrian, Estonian,
Catalan and Portuguese government portals.

- Safer access to chat services by kids and young people.

- Making it easier for students to study in other European countries.

- Electronic delivery of documents across borders.

- Dealing with changes of address for people moving to another country.

The other joy of the project of course is that it spreads the British
government's world-beating ability to lose data across the continent. In fact
the British government got in early - it lost a USB stick containing 12
million Government Gateway access codes back in 2008. The stick was found two
weeks later in a Brewers Fayre pub carpark near Cannock, Staffordshire.





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