Title: Towards a common European electronic identity eID framework
1Towards a common Europeanelectronic identity
(eID) framework
- Frank Robben
- Crossroads Bank for Social Security
- Federal Public Service for ICT
- frank.robben_at_ksz.fgov.be
- www.law.kuleuven.be/icri/frobben
2Ministerial Declaration 24/11/2005
- By 2010 European citizens and business shall be
able to benefit from secure means of electronic
identification that maximise user convenience
while respecting data protection regulations.
Such means shall be made available under the
responsibility of the Member States but
recognised across the EU.
3Ministerial Declaration - Related actions
- Member States will, during 2006, agree a process
and roadmap for achieving the electronic identity
objectives and address the national and European
legal barriers to the achievement of the
electronic identity objectives work in this area
is essential for public administrations to
deliver personalised electronic services with no
ambiguity as to the users identity - Member States will, over the period 2006-2010,
work towards the mutual recognition of national
electronic identities by testing, piloting and
implementing suitable technologies and methods
4Roadmap
- breaking down into key areas of work
- user awareness and acceptance
- validation and key applications
- European interoperability (semantic/organisational
/technical) - mutual recognition
- eID management at national level
- legal certainty
- common terminology, common principles, minimal
norms - real implementation depends on the existence of
measurable objectives and a reporting mechanism
5User awareness and acceptance
Identify user benefits, awareness,
promotion formulate vision
Wide awareness campaign
Use Cases (eProcurement,, migrant workers)
Validation and key applications
Testbeds / pilots, e.g. in CIP e-procurement,
health info networks
CEC as lead user
eTEN, IDABC testbeds specifications
European inter-operability
Semantic
IST RD for federated, multi-level, secure eIDM
Common eIDM Framework
Federated eID Management
Organisational
CEN eIDM standardisation link to ECC
Technical
IDABC business attestations study
eID management at national level
IDABC e-sign studies
eIDM at national level
Explain role of e-sign Directive
Legal certainty
Authentication Model Levels
Equal Treatment of national eIDs
EU provisions Recognition of national eIDs
Modinis study
Common principles, minimal norms
eID Terminology Objectives
Definition of eID
Personal Data Ownership Model
eID Role Management
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
country inputs
Network and IT security
Authentication levels overview (ENISA)
6Conclusion of the panel discussion
- roadmap seems to address the correct issues
- need for
- a common terminology conform to international
standards - common high level objectives and basic
principles, taking into account the specific
situation of the government sector
7Conclusion of the panel discussion
- need for
- coordination with regard to authentication levels
- acceptance of pluralism of different eID
technologies - cross-fertilization with the private sector
(solutions should not be limited to government) - a consistent risk management methodology
8Conclusion of the panel discussion
- need for
- a federated system, with interoperability and
based on loose coupling - a model for the inheritance of trust in eID
between Member States, that is transparent for
the citizen - a pivotal role for the use of privacy enhancing
technologies as a basis for well-founded trust
9Conclusion of the panel discussion
- need for
- relevance for the citizen and business customers
- identifying sample PEGS by surveying citizen and
business customers to see what they would find
useful
10Conclusion of the panel discussion
- in order to meet the common objectives, Member
States should have the ability to build an eID
services that correspond to their culture and
legal environment, especially with regard to
privacy protection - a good cooperation between authorities
responsible for eID management and privacy
commissions can be very useful
11Conclusion of the panel discussion
- a proposal for moving personal data from
multitude of large databases into secure,
private, personal storage spaces owned by
individuals, who can give a license for access to
selected personal data items by third parties has
been presented, but questions have been put about
the general applicability of the proposal in the
relation between individuals and the government
12Thank you for your attention !
- Frank Robben
- Crossroads Bank for Social Security
- Federal Public Service for ICT
- frank.robben_at_ksz.fgov.be
- www.law.kuleuven.be/icri/frobben