National ID? How about a global ID?
Infrastructure coalescing for integrated international identity
management
URL SOURCE: COMPUTERWORLD
August 10, 2007 (InfoWorld) -- The Federation for Identity and
Cross-Credentialing Systems (FiXs) -- a little-known group of
nonprofits, government contractors, commercial entities, and
government agencies -- has just unveiled a first-of-its-kind
global infrastructure to support distributed, integrated
identity management and cross-credentialing across
organizations. The implementation combines several existing
security technologies along with a set of trusted models,
policies, and operating rules to insure the accurate identity of
personnel accessing physical sites or logical systems.
Already in a pilot mode at a handful of government agencies and
defense contractors, the FiXs identity management initiative
does not have a hard date for broad deployment, although the
impediments do not appear to be technical. "The cultural gap
with the public in general is still too wide," said Dr. Mike
Mestrovich, president of FiXs. "I think there would have to be a
public consensus to move us in that direction and I don't see
that happening until at least 2009 or beyond."
Founded in 2004 and based in Fairfax, Va., FiXs counts among its
members the Department of Defense, Wells Fargo, Lockheed Martin,
EDS, and several others. Modeled after secure electronic payment
systems and initially implemented by the DOD's Defense Manpower
Data Center (DMDC), the FiXs initiative meets the objectives set
forth in the October 2006 Homeland Security Presidential
Directive (HSPD-12).
"Until now, cross-bordering policies between government and
industry had not been established," said Mary Dixon, director at
the DMDC. The FiXs implementation does not assign roles, grant
or deny access, or otherwise act as a gatekeeper. Rather, the
mission of FiXs is simply to authenticate the identity of
participants within its member organizations. Once verified by
FiXs, individual site managers and systems administrators assign
or designate access controls based on the role of the individual
and the policies of a given organization.
PAGE 2
FiXs' capabilities allow it to cross between both public and
private sector organizations using a federated trust model. The
implementation is available worldwide in local or remote
settings via both wireless and wired environments. Access is
available in real time. An individual's specific identity data
remains within their vetted source organization.
"By its very nature, the federated solution aids in privacy
because there is no central database and individual data can be
stored in only one [vetted] place," Dr. Mestrovich said. Yet the
distributed design and cross-organizational model found in the
FiXs implementation does offer the possibility of a future
national or international identity management system that might
cross borders and organizational boundaries. "The federated
approach can actually take the place of a mandated National ID
system," Dr. Mestrovich stated.
Still, the head of FiXs does not see a national or international
identity management implementation as a near-term reality for a
couple of reasons. First, no schedule has been defined to
implement such a system on the federal, state, or local level,
let alone among the broader private sector. "We are speaking to
a couple of States about using FiXs, but no timetable has been
set," Dr. Mestrovich said.
More to the point, even though the federated identity management
approach could power a national or international system, policy
and implementation agreements would be needed among federal,
state, and local government agencies as well as corporate
governance boards, civil libertarians, foreign governments, and
the population at large.
The initial DMDC pilot leverages the trust model, operating
rules, policies, and security defined by FiXs and it can be
considered a reference implementation. Several technologies
underpin this early federated identify management and
cross-credentialing deployment. Among these is the Common Access
Card (CAC), which contains individual information housed in a
barcode and within an integrated circuit chip. The card is used
to secure both physical sites and for systems access.
In this implementation, CAC is combined with the Defense
Biometric Identity System (DBIDS) to accurately identify
personnel -- whether full time employees (FTEs) or contractors.
Beyond CAC and the DBIDS, FiXs also includes cross reference
capabilities that include photographs, textual, and fingerprint
data. Industry standard encryption is used to secure the
identity management process.
The FiXs organization currently has just under thirty member
organizations, but the group is open to additional members. With
this early implementation, group members can help to shape
identity management policies and technologies as FiXs begins to
be leveraged by a broader number of public entities and private
sector firms.