1 / 22

Getting to Grips with e-ID Interoperability with a Perspective on the STORK LSP

www.oasis-open.org. Getting to Grips with e-ID Interoperability with a Perspective on the STORK LSP. Roger Dean Executive Director EEMA. What are eema’s Credentials?. Founded 1987 European wide non profit association Registered in Brussels 1,500 member representatives

milla
Télécharger la présentation

Getting to Grips with e-ID Interoperability with a Perspective on the STORK LSP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. www.oasis-open.org Getting to Grips with e-ID Interoperability with a Perspective on the STORK LSP Roger Dean Executive Director EEMA

  2. What are eema’s Credentials? • Founded 1987 • European wide non profit association • Registered in Brussels • 1,500 member representatives • Membership base of multinational end user organisations including Volvo, Siemens AG, AIB, European Commission, Hoffmann le Roche, Total, Visa, K.U.Leuven. • Vender members include Microsoft, HP, Identrus, Verizon, CoreStreet, Grabowsky BV, Orange, Aware, KPMG, BEA.

  3. eema Organisation • Headquarters Staff • Day to day management of the Association • Administration • Liaison with Government, Industry and other Associations • Member communications • Organise Teleconferences • Elected Board of Directors • Strategic planning • Program planning • Corporate governance • Subsection coordination • Project Teams • Temporary teams working on a specific project – occasionally teaming with other associations • Ad-Hoc Focus Workgroups • Temporary teams focussing on a specific topic to produce a position paper or run an event • National Interest Groups • Organise mini events within specific European regions EEMA Online Forums and Events

  4. 2008 eema Publications • Position Papers e-mail Archiving White Paper Spam & e-mail Abuse Management Towards Understanding Identity Role Based Access Control – A User Guide Password Synchronisation • Twice Monthly eema Online • Member Section of the web Members submit “independent” papers for publication • Events Reports from eema events Conference proceedings and presentations • Online forum Members discussionforum on current topics

  5. eema current Projects STORK - (Secure idenTity acrOss boRders linKed).To resolve the interoperability challenges of cross border Identity Cards. eema is involved in the communication and dissemination and exploitation of the initiative. Sponsor: EU (13 Governments Across Europe)Partners: e-Forum (Brussels) and GOV2U (Greece)Duration: 3 Years ICECom- Intelligent Content Evaluation for Communication Retention of electronic communications for legislative purposes. eema’s Role is to create awareness through our usual channelsSponsor: DTI Partners: Pera, Loughborough University, Essential Computing, intY Ltd Duration: 2 Years LEONARDO DA VINCI Community Vocational Training Action Programme. It is part of the European Commission's new Lifelong Learning Programme for SME’s and is designed to build a skilled workforce through European partnerships. eema’s role is part of the European wide e-Training and e-mentoring sub-project. Sponsor: EUPartners: Hungary, Italy, Poland, Romania, Slovinia Duration: 2 Years

  6. STORK– our vision To simplify administrative formalities by providing secure online access to public services across EU borders.

  7. eGovernment objectives(ICT-PSP call 2007)

  8. STORK– our mission To develop and test common specifications for secure and mutual recognition of national electronic identity (eID) between participating countries.

  9. STORK– the member states • Austria • Belgium • Estonia • France • Germany • Italy • Luxembourg • Netherlands • Portugal • Slovenia • Spain • Sweden • United Kingdom • Plus - Iceland

  10. STORK - at a glance Project coordinator ATOS Origin Sociedad Anonima Española Duration: 3 years from the start of the project (1st June 2008) Total cost: €20M Programme: ICT Policy Support Programme under the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme (CIP)

  11. STORK– the team • Atos Origin sae (Spain) • Capgemini Nederland B.V. (The Netherlands) • Bundeskanzleramt Österreich (Austria) • Federale Overheidsdienst Informatie en Communicatie Technologie (Belgium) • Bundesamt fuer Sicherheit in der Informationstechnik (Germany) • AS Sertifitseerimiskeskus (Estonia) • Ministerio de Administraciones Publicas (Spain) • Direction Générale de la Modernisation de l'Etat (France) • Government To You (Greece) • Politecnico di Torino (Italy) • Ministry of Finance (Iceland) • Service eLuxembourg (Luxembourg) • Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations (The Netherlands) • Agência para a Modernização Administrativa, I.P. (Portugal) • Swedish Administrative Development Agency (Sweden) • Ministry of Public Administration of the Republic of Slovenia (Slovenia) • Identity and Passport Service (UK) • Universitat Jaume I (Spain) • Agència Catalana de Certificació (Spain) • Centro Nazionale per l'Informatica nella Pubblica Amministrazione (Italy) • Regione Lombardia (Italy) • Instituto Superior Tecnico (Portugal) • MULTICERT - Serviços de Certificação Electrónica, S.A. (Portugal) • European Electronic Messaging Association (UK) • European Forum for e-Public Services (Brussels) • Þjóðskrá (Iceland) • Technische Universität Graz (Austria) • Kruispuntbank van de Sociale Zekerheid (Belgium) • T-Systems Enterprise Services GmbH (Germany)

  12. STORK– objectives • Define common rules and specifications to assist mutual recognition of eIDs across national borders; • Test in real life environments, secure and easy-to-use eID solutions for citizens and businesses; • Interact with other EU initiatives to maximize the usefulness of eID services.

  13. STORK– work packages

  14. Pilots - using open standards common service architecture allowing citizens to use their national eIDs to access e- Government portals across borders, platform for safer online communication using eIDs for children, service facilitating students’ mobility across Europe, use of eID for cross-border electronic delivery for citizens and businesses, and for testing the electronic process of address change for EU citizens that move to other Member States.

  15. EXAMPLESon a EU eIDM framework A citizen located in country A with an eID… will be able to make tax declarations in country B where h/she is working (commuting)… will be able to get the pension rights from country D (where h/she worked some years ago) online will be able to get automatic and paperless reimbursement of health expenses incurred during holidays in country C…

  16. EXAMPLESon a EU eIDM framework A business located in country A with an eID… will be able to participate in public tenders published in country B… eProcurement will be able to get the repayment and refund of VAT expenditures easier in country D… “one stop shop” will be able to make safer electronic transactions with clients and suppliers in country C… eCommerce

  17. STORK - security All efforts will be made to ensure that mutual recognition of electronic identity makes identity theft extremely difficult. As authentication levels for a given application may differ across Member States, the project will develop “circles of trust” at European scale. Security and privacy are serious concerns within the project.

  18. The solution will: be scalable to all EU Member States. be technology-transparent, robust, with measurable benefits, be implemented in such a way that it is sustainable beyond the life of the pilot. save time and money with safer transactions, less fraud, better control over personal data and simplified procedures. STORK– impact The project will result in the smooth cross- border operation of several key public services.

  19. STORK– how to get involved Development Consortium Layer EU Wide Spec Block Specifications “Building Blocks” Testing Member State Reference Group Policy Information Service Industry Group Community of Interest

  20. STORK– how to get involved

  21. Forthcoming eema events 2008/9 8thOct - STORK Workshop & 1st Industry Group meeting Madrid 7-9 Oct - ISSE – Information Security Solutions Europe Madrid 4th Nov - Benelux Regional Interest Group Federated Identity ING, Amsterdam 11th Nov - eema UK Regional Interest Group e-Mail Archiving – compliance & governance BCS, London 2nd Dec - Benelux Regional Interest Group Legal & interoperability issues for e-Health Leuven, Belgium 2009 3rd Feb - Benelux Regional Interest Group Using RFID in Identity & Access Management Deloitte, Brussels 17/18 Mar - The European e-ID Interoperability Conference Brussels 23rd Apr - Benelux Regional Interest Group Identity & Access Management Belgium

  22. Conclusions Questions? roger.dean@eema.org STORK - www.eid-stork.eu

More Related