Feds Look To Private Industry To Build National ID Infrastructure

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Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


Feds Look To Private Industry To Build National ID Infrastructure


White House officially releases its National Strategy for Trusted Identities In Cyberspace (NSTIC) plan



If there was an underlying message in todays official unveiling of the White Houses National Strategy for Trusted Identities In Cyberspace (NSTIC), it was that the federal government wants you to know it has no intention of building a secure authentication infrastructure itself for the Internet -- thats the role of the private sector, and the government just wants to facilitate it.
NSTIC, which was first
announced by the administration last June
, is basically a national strategy for trusted digital identities, and a nationwide, federated identity infrastructure aimed at replacing the increasingly precarious username-and-password model. NIST was
named late last year as the lead agency
for coordinating the program.
The goal is an ecosystem for users and organizations to conduct online transactions securely and privately and to ensure the identities of all parties are trusted.
Andy Ozment, White House director for cybersecurity policy, said today in a press briefing that the NSTIC aims to accomplish four things: to protect consumer privacy on the Internet; to protect consumers from identity theft and online fraud; to drive economic growth by moving more services online that are currently limited to brick-and-mortar; and to create a platform for new and innovative services online.
Passwords are easily broken and extremely hard to remember, Ozment says. And nobody knows youre a dog on the Internet.
Proving users are who they say they are on the Internet is difficult to do today, he says.
Although cybersecurity coordinator Howard Schmidt last year reiterated that a national ID card was not on the table, administration officials again emphasized that there will be no national identity card, and that the main change to the new NSTIC draft issued today is that it shows that private industry will build it.
We put out a public draft in June, which is unusual for a national strategy. But it had to be real coordination between public and private entities, said Jeremy Grant, senior executive adviser of ID management at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), in the briefing today. Weve gotten great feedback that weve since incorporated into the draft.
The real clarity here is on the role of the private sector leadership ... I do think the most prominent change here is how its clear that the private sector is in the lead here, Grant said.
But the missing link is just who will issue these new digital credentials. Avivah Litan, vice president and distinguished analyst with Gartner, says thats a major hurdle to the NSTIC. Its great that you have the White House and Howard Schmidt behind this concept. But whos going to issue the credentials, and whats the liability equation? No one is stepping up to that role, Litan says.
Theres plenty of federated identity technology out there today, she says. No one wants to be the issuing identity provider, Litan says. Until we get that, these systems are going to sit there. Youve got to have a business case for it.
Other countries with national identity programs do so via the government or banks, for instance, she says.
While several vendors are already on board to support the NSTIC program in some way, including executives from Google and PayPal, as well as the Center for Democracy and Technology and the American Bar Association Identity Management Legal Task Force, some security vendors have their reservations, especially when it comes to privacy.
Our companys mission has always been to reduce identity theft by letting people find and protect personally identifiable information. To the extent NSTIC reduces the use of Social Security numbers in the marketplace, we support it. However, to the extent it creates new opportunities for identity fraud, we suggest improvements and regulations. Without proper regulatory safeguards, NSTIC may do more harm than good, says Todd Feinman, CEO of Identity Finder. We look forward to helping the Department of Commerce implement smart policy that will protect consumer privacy.
Meanwhile, NIST plans to host NSTIC workshops starting in September, and to help launch pilot programs in 2012.
The full NSTIC document is available for download
here
(PDF).
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Feds Look To Private Industry To Build National ID Infrastructure