Tarjeta de la identificación del EU antes de 2010
Por Phil Muncaster
asociación comercial del E-negocio Eema ha revelado planes para hacer servicios nacionales del documento de identidad en la unión europea tranferibles a través de los Estados miembro.
La iniciativa fue revelada en Soluciones Europa de la seguridad de la información Conferencia (ISSE) en Varsovia la semana pasada y cigüeña bautizada. Se piensa para traer gobiernos nacionales juntos abordar la no-estandardización de los sistemas electrónicos de la identidad a través de países del EU, según el director ejecutivo de Eema, decano de Roger. El plazo para esto es 2010, cuando el marco europeo de la gerencia del eID del EU entra en la fuerza.
“It’s a three-year project and the UK government is playing a significant part,” Dean said. “But each government has its own agenda. You have to show the benefits to government, citizens and businesses [to get buy-in].”
Supporters say a pan-European ID card agreement could provide help in migration between member states, and accessing social security services, medical prescriptions and pension payments. It could also ease cross-border student enrolment in colleges, as well as provide identification in lieu of a driving licence.
However, experts warned that there is a long way to go before the framework is assured of success. “The technology to achieve the goal of allowing electronic ID cards to work in multiple states is available but has never been commercialised on this scale before,” argued Dan Blum of analyst Burton Group.
Blum argued that commercial organisations should persevere with their identity-based projects despite the problems many encounter early on.
“The elephant in the road is trust and how you audit your partners,” Blum told delegates. “But the incentives are transactional revenue, new business opportunities and lower admin costs.”
Blum recommended firms think about the SAML 2.0 standard as the basis for projects because it has the most industry buy-in, but warned that interoperability issues may still arise. “We need to pressure the standards organisations and the vendor groups so there is no friction,” he added.
Also at ISSE, experts rejected the suggestion that vendors should be held legally liable for product faults, as recommended by a recent Lords report on internet security.
“Liability and legislation can have unintended consequences for innovation, competitiveness, product acceptance and the supplier ecosystem,” said Steve Lipner, Microsoft senior director of security engineering.
ID Cards Section has more related reportsHelp keep RINF going..Comment on 'EU ID card By 2010' :
Related News:














Cargamento…













