April 15, 2011 11:18 AM PDT
Obama moves forward with Internet ID plan

by Declan McCullagh

http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20054342-281.html
 
The Obama administration said today that it's moving ahead with a plan for 
broad adoption of Internet IDs despite concerns about identity centralization, 
and hopes to fund pilot projects next year.

At an event hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington, D.C., 
administration officials downplayed privacy and civil liberties concerns about 
their proposal, which they said would be led by the private sector and not be 
required for Americans who use the Internet.

There's "no reliable way to verify identity online" at the moment, Commerce 
Secretary Gary Locke said, citing the rising tide of security threats including 
malware and identity theft that have grown increasingly prevalent over the last 
few years. "Passwords just won't cut it here."

A 55-page document (PDF) released by the White House today adds a few more 
details to the proposal, which still remains mostly hazy and inchoate.

It offers examples of what the White House views as an "identity ecosystem," 
including obtaining a digital ID from an Internet service provider that could 
be used to view your personal health information, or obtaining an ID linked to 
your cell phone that would let you log into IRS.gov to view payments and file 
taxes. The idea is to have multiple identity providers that are part of the 
same system.

Administration officials plan to convene a series of workshops between June and 
September of this year that would bring together companies and advocacy groups 
and move closer to an actual specification for what's being called the National 
Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace, or NSTIC.

Left unsaid was that the series of workshops, which will be open to the public, 
will give the proposal's backers a chance to downplay concerns that it could 
become the virtual equivalent of a national ID card.

During his speech, Locke lashed out at the "conspiracy theory set" who have 
criticized the proposal. A column in NetworkWorld.com, for instance, called 
NSTIC a "great example of rampant, over-reaching, ignorant, and ill-conceived 
political foolishness."


"A top-down strategy for online identity is unlikely to work," Jim Harper, 
director of information studies at the Cato Institute, said today. "People will 
not participate in a government-corporate identity project that deviates from 
their demand for control of identity information, which is an essential part of 
privacy protection, autonomy, and liberty."

The Commerce Department's National Telecommunications and Information 
Administration created a YouTube video (above) to reassure Americans that 
"there is no central database tracking your actions." An FAQ repeats the 
message. It's enlisted allies to spread the message, including the Center for 
Democracy and Technology's Leslie Harris, who wrote in a post on commerce.gov 
that NSTIC is "not a national ID," but instead represents "a call for 
leadership and innovation from private companies."

One intriguing feature of today's description of NSTIC released by the White 
House is that it appears to build on a joint Microsoft-IBM project called 
Attribute-Based Credentials. (See CNET's previous coverage.)

The idea is to use encryption technology to let people disclose less about 
themselves--ideally, the minimum necessary to complete a transaction. The NSTIC 
document gives the example of someone filling a medical prescription online: 
"The pharmacy is not told (his) birth date or the reason for the prescription. 
The technology also filters information so that the attribute providers---the 
authoritative sources of the age and prescription information---do not know 
what pharmacy (is  being used)."

Related links
• A new (old) way to protect privacy: Disclose less
• Obama to hand Commerce Dept. authority over cybersecurity ID
The idea of using encryption technology to protect privacy in this way isn't 
exactly new. The legendary cryptographer David Chaum, the father of digital 
cash who's now building secure electronic voting systems, developed some of 
these ideas in the late 1980s. Dutch cryptographer Stefan Brands more fully 
developed the concept of limited disclosure digital certificates; Microsoft 
bought his company in 2008, and released the U-Prove specification last year 
along with a promise not to file patent lawsuits over its use.

On the other hand, it would be more convenient for law enforcement (not to 
mention intelligence agencies) if a more traditional, centralized system were 
used.

Sen. Barbara Mikulski, a Maryland Democrat who also spoke today at the Chamber 
event, seemed to veer a bit off-message--and instead of touting anonymity, she 
stressed the importance of aiding law enforcement.

Protecting civil liberties is important, Mikulski said. "But the first civil 
liberty is to be able to have a job, lead a life, and be able to buy what you 
want in the way we now buy it, which is through credit  cards."

"We're going to support the FBI," said Mikulski, who heads the Senate 
subcommittee that oversees the FBI's funding. "We're going to support the 
growth of the FBI."

The Obama administration's record on digital identification and authentication 
is mixed.

During the 2008 presidential campaign, President Obama told CNET that "I do not 
support the Real ID program." But after being elected, Obama has not called for 
its repeal and his administration said last month that it's working "very 
closely with the states to assist with implementation."

Another cautionary note comes from a previous public-private partnership that 
also sought to improve identity-related authentication. The largest company 
participating in the TSA's registered traveler identification program, Verified 
Identity Pass' CLEAR, shut down in 2009. Its assets were sold to the highest 
bidder.

Another concern: Although the White House is describing the NSTIC plan as 
"voluntary," federal agencies could begin to require it for IRS e-filing, 
applying for Social Security or veterans' benefits, renewing passports online, 
requesting federal licenses (including ham radio and pilot's licenses), and so 
on. Then obtaining one of these ID would become all but mandatory for most 
Americans.

"For end-users, online identification has become increasingly cumbersome and 
complex," says Marc Rotenberg, president of the Electronic Privacy Information 
Center. "But it remains unclear whether the White House proposal will solve 
this problem or create new problems. There is the real risk that consolidated 
identity schemes will lead to 'hyper' identity theft."
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to