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European Electronic Identity Practices Country Update of Austria Peter F Brown Office of the CIO, Austrian Federal Chancellery Chair, CEN eGov Focus Group.

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Presentation on theme: "European Electronic Identity Practices Country Update of Austria Peter F Brown Office of the CIO, Austrian Federal Chancellery Chair, CEN eGov Focus Group."— Presentation transcript:

1 European Electronic Identity Practices Country Update of Austria Peter F Brown Office of the CIO, Austrian Federal Chancellery Chair, CEN eGov Focus Group

2 CA organisation Responsible CA organisation: A1, A-Trust, SV (no unique CA) The background of the organisation (private/public): Private (A1, A-Trust) and public (SV) Description of the existing CA infrastructure (e.g. registration authority, card factory etc): Different “representations” of citizen card

3 Status of National legislation on eID eID specific regulations enacted and in place 2004 eGovernment Act 2004 Administrative Signature Order 2005 Electronic Document Act

4 Status of National deployment of eID Name of the project: Bürgerkarte (”Citizen Card”) Plans, piloting or implementation? Operational Is the card obligatory? Yes/No No Starting date of issuance: 2004

5 Status of National deployment of eID Envisioned total number of cardholders: 8M Number of cards/certificates issued by 31-10-2004: 70.000 (some 25K QCs) Number of inhabitants: 8M Yearly growth rate (percentage): 70.000 SV cards per week at moment Expected number of cards/eID certs by end of 2007: 13M

6 Status of national deployment of eID Bürgerkarte: Not an official ID document or European travel document Supports on-line access to e-Services and electronic signatures Valid for 3 years

7 Status of national deployment of eID Price of the cards: - to the citizen, depends on issuer (€0 up to 15) - to the card issuer: 0 (no special fee) - for the card reader and software: € 10 (Government subsidy to offset retail price) Various suppliers of end/user package – mobile phone, banks, civil service, social insurance

8 Basic ID function What cardholder data is electronically stored in the card: - national identifier: Yes - family name, given name: Yes - sex: No - date of birth: Yes - nationality: No - others........ No

9 Basic ID function Are these data elements in a dedicated data file? Yes - Is the file ’openly accessible’? depends on card - If not, how is the file protected? Querying national id requires an eGov certificate Name and date of birth may be freely accessible - Does the data file comply with the ICAO LDS? No Is the personal data (also) held in a certificate? No, only name

10 Basic Authentication function What Cardholder Verification mechanism is used: –PIN –Biometrics not envisioned Is there a PKI supported cardholder authentication mechanism? Yes Is there a mutual device authentication mechanism? Varies according to implementation

11 Basic Signing function PKI-supported signing mechanism (certificate and keypair) present for e-transaction services (non –repudiation)

12 eID based services What kind of services (include examples) are accessible to cardholders based on acceptance of the cards / eID Certificates: Various eGov services (e.g. tax declaration, municipality services), but open to eCommerce offers Total number of eID based services accessible by cardholders by 31.10.2004: 100 Goal (in numbers/ percentage) of eID based services to be accessible to cardholders by the end of 2007: 80%

13 eAuthentication Business models; financial What are the Charging/Revenue mechanisms? Private CAs charge for certificates What charges are levied for use of the card? None (compared with paid non-eService charges) Is there a charge for checking certificates and if so who pays for this? None, prohibited by law Has a cost benefit analysis been compiled for the eID scheme? Yes, by private sector suppliers Is there a study report available? No

14 eAuthentication Business models; public/private partnership Are non government bodies allowed to use the IAS or other card functions in support of their services? Yes, in line with data-protection laws Is the card a multi-application smart card? Yes but depends on implenter/implementation –80-100% of the deployed card base is multi-application smart card enabled –Additional services (other than core IAS) loaded pre- issue

15 eAuthentication Business models; cross border usage Are there agreements with other national smart card issuers for mutual recognition of cards? (Status of Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with other CAs) –No bilateral agreements; QCs are recognised under 1999/93/EC; prototype integration of IT and FI eIDs

16 Other Interoperability issues Level of Current Compliance: –CWA 14890 Secure Signature creation device: depends on issuer

17 Next plans Continued pilots on integration of foreign eIDs into national model Development of further server-side service modules Acting by proxy (“power of attorney”, for individuals and companies)

18 Lessons learned so far Need greater pan-European cooperation (especially on recognition of digitally signed and authenticated Austrian documents abroad) Possible limitations and liability questions arising from use of Bridge CAs

19 Porvoo Group cooperation issues Issue: need for an Interoperability Framework Action: –Survey of eID requirements –Map between different requirements and solutions –development of a ”Common Solutions and Services Centre” (see also Austrian proposal for en EU eGov “Virtual Competence Centre”)

20 More information Web-pages for the project/eID issues: www.buergerkarte.at email: herbert.leitold@a-sit.at peter.brown@cio.gv.at

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