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Ponce
16th April 2011, 10:45 AM
White House unveils cyber ID proposal.

A man surfing the web at an internet cafe
© AFP/File Amro Maraghi
AFP

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The White House unveiled a plan on Friday designed to boost confidence and business in cyberspace through the creation of a single, secure online credential.

"By making online transactions more trustworthy and better protecting privacy, we will prevent costly crime, we will give businesses and consumers new confidence, and we will foster growth and untold innovation," President Barack Obama said in a statement.

"That's why this initiative is so important for our economy," Obama said.

The National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC) proposes the creation of secure and reliable online credentials that would be available to consumers who want to use them.

It would be private-sector driven and participation would be voluntary.

The "identity ecosystem" would involve the use of a single credential -- unique software on a smartphone, a smart card or a token that generates a one-time digital password, for example, -- and would eliminate the need to remember multiple passwords.

"The consumer can use their single credential to log into any website, with more security than passwords alone provide," the White House said.

"Consumers can use their credential to prove their identity when they're carrying out sensitive transactions, like banking, and can stay anonymous when they are not," it said.

"The Internet has transformed how we communicate and do business, opening up markets, and connecting our society as never before," Obama said. "But it has also led to new challenges, like online fraud and identity theft, that harm consumers and cost billions of dollars each year."

The White House said the goal is to "make online transactions more trustworthy, thereby giving businesses and consumers more confidence in conducting business online."

In addition to providing more security for consumers, the White House said the proposed system could also provide better privacy protections.

"Today, a vast amount of information about consumers is collected as they surf the Internet and conduct transactions," it said. "How organizations handle that information can vary greatly, and more often than not, it is difficult for consumers to understand how their privacy will (or will not) be protected.

"The NSTIC seeks to drive the development of privacy-enhancing policies as well as innovative privacy-enhancing technologies to ensure that the ecosystem provides strong privacy protections for consumers," it said.

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, speaking at an event at the US Chamber of Commerce here, said "we must do more to help consumers protect themselves, and we must make it more convenient than remembering dozens of passwords.

"Working together, innovators, industry, consumer advocates, and the government can develop standards so that the marketplace can provide more secure online credentials, while protecting privacy, for consumers who want them," Locke said.

The Washington-based Center for Democracy & Technology issued a statement emphasizing that the NSTIC was not proposing a national identification program.

"There are two key points about this strategy: First, this is NOT a government-mandated, national ID program; in fact, it's not an identity 'program' at all," said CDT president Leslie Harris.

"Second, this is a call by the administration to the private sector to step up, take leadership of this effort and provide the innovation to implement a privacy-enhancing, trusted system," Harris said.

http://www.activistpost.com/2011/04/white-house-unveils-cyber-id-proposal.html

Twisted Titan
16th April 2011, 10:54 AM
The "identity ecosystem" would involve the use of a single credential -- unique software on a smartphone, a smart card or a token that generates a one-time digital password, for example, -- and would eliminate the need to remember multiple passwords


Always under the premise of "making things easy" the meathooks are further entrenched

SilverMagnet
16th April 2011, 11:17 AM
Moving right along. Next step, RFID chips under the skin.

All for your convenience of course.

Ponce
16th April 2011, 12:36 PM
And all this is "for your convinience" ......... of course.

madfranks
16th April 2011, 03:03 PM
It would be private-sector driven and participation would be voluntary.

Baloney. If the private sector or free market found something like this to be something that people wanted, it would already exist.

Andy9999
16th April 2011, 03:29 PM
THIS IS SO THEY CAN TAX YOU :boohoo

ShortJohnSilver
16th April 2011, 03:33 PM
It would be private-sector driven and participation would be voluntary.

At first ...

mrnhtbr2232
16th April 2011, 03:51 PM
A single sign-on will evolve into a parallel equivalent of getting felt up at the airport as a gatekeeping technology conveniently tied to a unique identifier. Wrapping it in a civilian initiative and saying it's not government mandated is total credibility fail. I would cite the creation of the TSA two months after 9-11. In the beginning they were relatively benign but today are an absolute travesty about rights and security, neither of which are even relevant to their self-importance. Trustworthy identification is a field of landmines - buyer beware.

Down1
16th April 2011, 03:52 PM
Down the road people who don't "opt in" will be blamed for all malware/hacking problems(whether true or not) and participation will become a requirement for net access.

Twisted Titan
16th April 2011, 10:32 PM
The Surest path to Hell ..........is a gradual one.



The Screwtape Letters

Buddha
17th April 2011, 02:02 AM
Moving right along. Next step, RFID chips under the skin.

All for your convenience of course.


I got a little story about this. Every year there is a little hick fair around here. In the lot of the masonic lodge no less. It was also "get your child chipped for free day." So I walked in there to see what was going on, and there is a young couple with their child. They are bringing in the kid to get chipped, and the chipping is going on is the basement, the gym type area of the building a few steps downwards after you walk in. The child gets to the top of the steps then starts crying uncontrollably, "I don't wanna go!!" These assholes are telling him that he has to go, the kid is like 5 or 6 years old. This keeps going on while I'm standing in the corner drinking my drink.

Anyway, this keeps going on, the kid won't go to get chipped. The parents have to carry him kicking and screaming. So I go down there, and walk to the main table and ask about becoming a mason. Some guy in his early 60s it looked like with a gold ring on every finger and venom in his eyes kept asking me questions about why I wanted to do this. "I'm a good Christian man wanting to better my community and the lives of others." I say. He sends me upstairs.

A man is sitting there on a laptop coincidentally putting together a welcome video for the lodge. I talk to him about becoming a mason, and watch the video. It's all about the fact that if you become a mason you will have more influance then otherwise and will be able to activly take part in helping the community. He keeps going like a snake oil sales man, when a woman walks in. She is a High Priestess of the Eastern Star and starts telling me about how they saved the legs of some kid from Hati. I ask why there is so much secrecy about what they do within the council chamber, which I was sitting in. She says that there are things about this that I am not supposed to know until it is time and I have proven myself to be trustworthy.

The only condition to join is that "I believe in a God" they said (and $100 of course) . I said thank you and picked up the drink that I left outside the door and left.

Thank you for listening to my mason story, control is bad.

Edit: This fair is always in September, I think that I may make an annual hobby of fucking with them. Next time I will have my shit together and act like a DA.