June 29, 2010

White House Preparing National Online ID Plan

Is anonymity about to be a thing of the past? Obama may have forgotten the U.S. Supreme court ruling on anonymous free speech.
6-29-2010 Washington DC:

The proposed system for authenticating people, organizations and infrastructure on the web at the transactional level will require an identity ecosystem.

The Obama administration is set to propose a new system for authenticating people, organizations and infrastructure on the Web. The online authentication and identity management system would be targeted at the transactional level -- for example, when someone logs into their banking website or completes an online e-commerce purchase.

Making such a system effective, however, will require creating an "identity ecosystem," backed by extensive public/private cooperation, said White House cybersecurity coordinator Howard Schmidt, delivering the opening keynote speech at the Symantec Government Symposium 2010 in Washington on Tuesday.

"This strategy cannot exist in isolation," he said. "It's going to take all of us working together." Furthermore, "we should not have to dramatically change the way we do business -- this should be a natural path forward," he said.

That path forward will hinge on a new draft of the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (PDF), due to be released Friday for the first time to the public, for a three-week comment period. Formerly known as the National Strategy for Secure Online Transactions, the report offers specific strategy and implementation recommendations, and may also recommend more sweeping policy and privacy changes.

The report builds on the Obama-commissioned Cyberspace Policy Review, which analyzed the government's information and communications infrastructure defensive capabilities. One of the report's recommendations was to "build a cybersecurity-based identity management vision and strategy that addresses privacy and civil liberties interests, leveraging privacy-enhancing technologies for the nation."

Simply issuing a Web-friendly biometric identification card to everyone in the country, of course, wouldn't necessarily make anyone or anything more secure, including online transactions. As the report also notes, to be effective, security tools and technology must be complemented by education. "There is always a necessity to do awareness and education of the end user," said Schmidt. "But you're not trying to teach the end user how to be a security expert."

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

With this system, they (Washington) can "hand pick" who they want off the internet and for how long.

No longer will you be identified by just your IP, YOUR number could be restricted too.

Reminds me of that Nazi tattoo the Jews had to wear.

Anonymous said...

Big brother reaching out in a attempt to grow even more....attempting to control even more of Americans every day lives

Just another SO said...

Realize this, this isn't just about RSO's. This is the government's way of controlling the flow of information. Just like the 'Internet Kill Switch' that Obama is trying to get through congress right now. Imagine, someone having the ability to shut down the internet, nationwide, for up to 4 months, with no justification needed until that 4 months is up.
This has to be fought with every fiber of our being. Even as RSO's, we are still protected under the 1st Admendment of the Constitution which guarentees our Freedom of Speech. The Internet is vital to that Free Speech. Contact your congressmen and women. These laws need to be killed ASAP.