Title: Aucun titre de diapositive
1 ,
The
Smart Card Charter the Helsinki Public ID
conference April 4-5 2002
Jan van Arkel Co-Chairman eEurope Smart Card
Charter
2 e-services ID Conference
- 35 Participants from 13 different
countries, from EU and abroad - all involved and active in e Government
and electronic ID functionalities
3 Targets for the Conference
- Information exchange on national
developments in domain of e-service ID - Build on the common interest in
realising pan-European interoperability
of identification, authentication and
electronic signature function in Public
Domain - Organise input (requirements
solutions) into the Smart Card Charter
Common Specifications
4eESC Mission
- Contribute to mass deployment of Smart Cards in
Europe - Identify the barriers to mass deployment and help
in bringing those barriers down. - Focus on - 4 application areas-
multi-functionality- end user acceptance -
other technical aspects
5 Building maintaining the network
-
-
- gt 350 organisations involved
- gt 1000 people on mailing list
- gt 70 meetings a year
- 250 people participating hands-on
6Logical structure Common Specs
APPLICATIONS
GIF
GLOBAL INTEROPERABILITY FRAMEWORK
GENERIC FUNCTIONS
TB1, TB2, TB12
PUBLIC ID, AUTHENTICATION, ELEC. SIGNATURE
MULTI APPLICATION PLATFORM
TB7
GENERIC CARD READERS
CONTACTLESS CARDS
TB6
TB4
7European Union 375 million people
Candidate countries 500 million people
8 4 main application areas
-
-
- - eGovernment
- - e-Payment
- - Health
- - Public transport
9Functionality of a Citizen service /digital
access card
- Mutual authentication of card and
infrastructure - Verification of cardholder identity (pin,
biometrics) - Provision of trust (digital signature)
- Travel Document within the EC
- Carrier for drivers license other official
documents - Supporting typical e-Government functionalities
- Capable of supporting private sector services
10- Personal data
- Country code
- National ID
- Surname
- Given name
- Gender
- Date of birth
- Place of birth
- Nationality
- Identifiers/URL'
Biometrics
PKI
11 e-Service ID cards top 3
- 1. Brunei
- 400K, personal data, biometrics and
PKI - 2. Malaysia
- 1M ? 19 M, personal data,
biometrics and PKI - 3. Japan
- 1M ? 100 M in 2004, data, PKI, Pin
12 e-Service cards in EU
- Policy decision has been made for
national electronic ID or Public Services
card by Austria, Belgium, Finland,
Greece, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal,
Spain, Sweden - Relevant national legislation already in
place in same countries except Portugal - Public Service card will be smartcard
Austria, Belgium, Finland, Ireland, Italy,
Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden,
UK (if applied will be a chipcard),
Germany
13 Public Key technology
- Will support PKI for authentication
purposes? France and Ireland no final
decision yet, other countries Yes - Will support PKI for non repudiation?
Same answer - Will support PKI for confidentiality ?
- Yes Finland, UK No Italy,
Spain, Under discussion Ne, Be, Irl
14 Pilot projects and nat. roll-out EU
- Pilot projects are active in
- Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, France
- National roll-out is underway in
- Sweden (100 K cards issued)
Finland ( 12 K cards issued) Italy (15
K cards issued) - Roll-out completed None
15(No Transcript)
16 The eEpoch project
- Demonstrating interoperability multi
aplication on a pan-European level,
supporting eGov - Supporting Public ID, strong
authentication - Supporting Digital signature (5.1 level)
- On basis of Multi Application Platform
- Using Generic (Finread compliant)
Cardreader - Not only demonstrator, also nucleus for
national roll-outs
17 The Pilot sites
-
- TB 1, led by Finland
- France, Issy as test site for national
development - Ireland, Donegal, Nat. development
- Italy, Bologna, National ID Card
- Italy, Rome, Social security card
- Spain, Valencia, National ID Card
- UK, Newcastle, citizen services
- Israel, Jerusalem, National ID Card
18 Conference conclusions
- The ID function is essential for successfull
eGovernment (and also for e-business) - National bodies are already making good
progress in implementing electronic IDs
- PKI is used for secure authentication,
identification and electronic signature
- Multi application is recognised as having
major potential but is still under
discussion - Card Holder Verification by PIN is well
esthablished use of biometrics is in its
early stages
19 Conference conclusions
- Contact smartcards prevail in most countries
- Widespread use of pilots but no large scale
roll-outs as yet - Risk of different solutions and non
interoperability (as is the case in domains
of e-Purse and European Health cards) - Agreed on resolution for cooperation in
the domain of public ID - Agreed on procedure to deliver input in the
Smart Card Charter Common
Specifications
20 More Information or jointhe Smart Card
Charter?
- http//eeurope-smartcards.org
- info_at_eeurope-smartcards
- arkel_at_cardlife.nl
Its free !!