Identity, Proofing/Verification and Credentialing: Future Requirements
(Room Tampa Convention Center:Room 22-23)
21 Sep 16
10:15 AM
-
11:00 AM
Tracks:
: Cross-cutting Issues, : Cross-cutting Issues, : Cross-cutting Issues
Future Planning
Nations and federations, including but not limited to the United States, should undertake the following:
1. Collaborate to develop end-to-end awareness capabilities that consider the priorities and concerns of governments, citizens, business, and consumers.
2. Where possible leverage open industry standards that are auditable and have been vetted by diverse communities of interest. Recognize that an ecosystem of solutions are available and will continue to evolve over time to meet specified needs of communities of interest with regard to identity validation. For example, contextual identity validation based on scores of data which is verified by authoritative sources.
3. Governments should undertake development of outreach programs to understand concerns and capabilities of everyday users as a means gathering actionable insights as well as developing opportunities to build the confidence and trust necessary to deploy new identity validation services and technologies.
4. Develop roadmaps that clearly define the path from innovation to verified solution. This is critical to enable communities of interest to have the confidence necessary to adopt news solutions to mitigate identified risks.
5. Educate policy makers and influences such that future policy will be structured to comprehend not only the art of the possible but also that path to a trusted verifiable identity validation solution.
6. Consider the establishment of authoritative sources not only from the private sector but also from the public sector. Current structures may prohibit the ability to leverage governmental sources as authoritative, provided that appropriate mitigating privacy respecting, choice, and consent policies are in place.
7. Consider both national and global strategic approaches. Data sources for identity validation and proofing may be derived from sources around the world. As the world becomes smaller through participation in a global digital economy, nations should consider their need to enable efficiencies of scale through the recognition of data sources in both global and national economic zones.