Difference between revisions of "Trusted Identifiers in Cyberspace"

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Revision as of 10:09, 7 March 2021

Full Title or Meme

The core concepts as introduced by President Obama in NSTIC papers.

Context

About 7 years ago, the White House introduced The National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC), an initiative collaboratively bringing together the private sector, advocacy groups, public sector agencies and other organizations to improve the privacy, security and convenience of online transactions. The Identity Ecosystem envisioned in the NSTIC is an online environment where individuals and organizations are able to trust each other because they follow agreed-upon standards to obtain and authenticate their digital identities – and the digital identities of devices.

To achieve this objective, the NSTIC established guiding principles for the creation of an Identity Ecosystem, developed with identity solutions that are:

  1. Privacy-enhancing and voluntary,
  2. Secure and Resilient,
  3. Interoperable and
  4. Cost-effective and easy to use.

Problems

The National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC) tried to solve all of the problems of Privacy and Security if Identifiers with a single strategy. NIST tried to bootstrap the strategy by creating an organization that sought input from all the stakeholders in Identity in Cyberspace. As is to be expected in such a free-for-all the resulting Identity Ecosystem Framework {IDEF} pleased no one. This page tries to narrow the problem to just getting the Identifiers right and building from there.

Solutions

The proposed solution is a hierarchy of Identifiers.

References