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In the past years, technology for validating a user's identity using a combination of a mobile phone, an identity document like a passport with NFC chip and improvements in real time facial recognition technology, have made real time, remote and trusted identity validation viable. As a result several vendors are now offering such a service, such as READ.ID and SisuID.
Other potential use cases may include the use of a passport for second factor authentication and using it as a way to do token recovery of other 2FA tokens. Previous work in the incubator (on READ.ID) and also within CSC/Elixir (on SisuID) have shown that on the technical side implementation of such services which are offered by vendors is not too difficult for a skilled technical team. However, typically the APIs and interfaces offered by the vendors do not align well with commonly used APIs in the R&E community. Furthermore, while the vendors services provide similar capabilities highlevel, there are some differences e.g in LoA which can be established and in user experience. This activity will investigate a possible business case to support identity verification and will consider a number of ways of delivering this (e.g. as an identity broker for a range of possible commercial identity verification services, as a GEANT offered service, as an information portal pointing to services etc). |
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This activity build on technical work from previous Incubator activities and hence has no technical work. |
Identity proofing is very expensive and scales very poorly, especially in cases where the users are (very) distributed. This is the case in several scenarios of research communities as well as in cases where e.g. new students living abroad need to be identified as part of the boarding into an institution. |
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There is no additional personal data processed as part of this activity |
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One of the goals of this activity is determine the sustainability of the proposed service. |
The study identified that a number of factors contribute to the efficient onboarding of users to access digital services and that an automated or automation-assisted document-based identity verification solution could be of benefit for the R&E community, particularly amongst certain segments of users, where the problem is most acute. This was confirmed through interviews with stakeholders, and although there was no strong pull for an immediate solution by many, some are already investigating or deploying solutions and many others expressed strong interest. Due to the early stage of this area the study was not able to determine the exact requirements of any solution or the potential deployment models, nevertheless it was able to collect valuable information and to make recommendations for subsequent steps. Although other identity-based initiatives such as eIDAS and European student card initiatives are underway the state of these initiatives indicates that there may still be utility in a document-based identify verification solution, at least in the short and medium term. Our findings indicated a strong desire for information about the capabilities of the various document-based identity verification solutions, which would help in defining what the requirements and suitable deployment model for an R&E focused solution could be. In particular we concluded that further work would be needed to reach a definitive conclusion and recommended:
It is hoped that an interested party or parties can take this work forward, as further work on this topic is currently outside the scope of the Incubator. |
Date | Activity | Owner | Minutes |
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June 23, 2020 | Kickoff meeting | ||