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NSTIC ID Ecosystem A Conceptual Model v03 Andrew Hughes October 2013 - October 2013 - IDESG Version 1.

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Presentation on theme: "NSTIC ID Ecosystem A Conceptual Model v03 Andrew Hughes October 2013 - October 2013 - IDESG Version 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 NSTIC ID Ecosystem A Conceptual Model v03 Andrew Hughes October 2013 AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 1

2 This version of the slide deck has been contributed to the IDESG. This slide deck was originally created September 2013 by Andrew Hughes – please contact for more information or comments. This deck builds upon material in the presentation deck originally presented to IDESG Committees at the July 2013 IDESG Plenary meeting at MIT. The content of this slide deck is the opinion of the author based on many discussions, experience, analysis and received feedback. The concepts have not been formally approved or endorsed by the IDESG Plenary. AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com www.idimmusings.com This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA. AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 2

3 Objectives To describe the NSTIC ID Ecosystem focusing on the interactions between members of an “online community” * To describe how major NSTIC Strategy Document elements work together to define an NSTIC ID Ecosystem and its participants AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 3 * The “Online Community” is central to the NSTIC ID Ecosystem concept and comes directly from the NSTIC Strategy document.

4 Context This ‘conceptual model’ sits above items such as standards, use cases, functional models The intent is to offer a view of what the target state NSTIC ID Ecosystem might look like and give structure to the components of the NSTIC ID Ecosystem AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 4

5 The NSTIC ID Ecosystem* will consist of different online communities that use interoperable technology, processes, and policies AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 5 *Source: The NSTIC Strategy Document

6 Take-away Concepts A defining characteristic of the NSTIC ID Ecosystem is that it is comprised of “online communities” * interacting in a variety of ways AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 6 * The term “online communities”, while not perfect, should be used until IDESG determines the best replacement term and creates an IDESG Vision statement.

7 NSTIC Vision* Individuals and organizations utilize secure, efficient, easy-to-use and interoperable identity solutions to access online services in a manner that promotes confidence, privacy, choice, and innovation. AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 7 *Source: The NSTIC Strategy Document

8 Take-away Concepts Access to online services is the central concept of the Vision “Identity Solutions” enable access to online services The online services and identity solutions must have features and capabilities that encourage adoption and use, and mitigate concerns and barriers to acceptance AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 8

9 Trust Framework* developed by a community defines the rights and responsibilities of that community’s participants specifies the policies and standards specific to the community defines the community-specific processes and procedures that provide assurance considers the level of risk associated with the transaction types of its participants AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 9 *Source: The NSTIC Strategy Document

10 Take-away Concepts The “online community” sets their own policies, standards and rules around the transactions and interactions of their members AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 10

11 In A Nutshell (these bullets capture the essence of an NSTIC ID Ecosystem) “Online communities” set their own rules according to their members’ needs “Online communities” interact with each other in the NSTIC ID Ecosystem The rules of different “online communities” might be different Access to online services enabled by identity solutions is at the heart of the NSTIC ID Ecosystem AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 11

12 NSTIC ID Ecosystem? AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 12 ID Ecosystem Framework Rules Arrows = Inter-community interactions Online Communities

13 Take-away Concepts “Online communities” ‘inside the line’ have been evaluated against the ID Ecosystem Framework policies, standards and rules These communities meet the conditions of inclusion The nature of the inter-community interactions is currently not standardized or regularized – they are custom built Although there are “online communities” outside the NSTIC ID Ecosystem, they are not shown here AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 13

14 “Online Community” Take a closer look at the internal structure of an NSTIC-y “online community” AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 14

15 A Proposed Point of View Within an “online community”, think of ‘Access to Online Services’ as an interaction or transaction between a provider and receiver of that online service The provider, receiver and service must abide by the rules of the “online community” – the Trust Framework rules (Now, and in the future) The online service receiver can choose which providers and services (and Communities!) meet their needs, including privacy, security, reliability, ease of use, confidence, etc. The online service provider defines what an online service consumer must do in order to receive service – the “Terms of Service” Some terms might be satisfied by presenting third-party credentials or tokens; or by payment; or by group affiliation or membership AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 15

16 The ‘Transaction’ Point of View In this point of view the working unit is the interaction-transaction between provider and receiver plus the ‘Terms of Service’ plus the Fulfillment’ of those terms meeting the community’s Trust Framework rules – everything else exists to support this interaction AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 16

17 A “Community” Unit AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 17 e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms Community Trust Framework Rules e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms e-Service Provider e-Service Receiver Transaction Type- Interaction Type Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms

18 Where’s the IdP? For that matter, where’s the CSP, CA, IdP/V, RP and all the other Assurance, Trust and Identity bits? This conceptual model considers them to be the means by which Terms of Service are expressed and fulfilled – so they do not appear at this level of abstraction AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 18

19 An “Online Community” AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 19 The Community Shared values, beliefs, principles Common goals and objectives Has ‘tools’ for joining Has ‘tools’ for locating Could be mandated by law The Transaction A particular set of commercial, social, ‘social contract’, or information exchanges that exist for the community, in support of their common goals Business Shared need to perform transactions in the context of the community Legal Trust Framework agreements Commercial contracts Legal Framework Technical Protocol suites & capability Network Connectivity Shared Standards An “Online Community” Trust Framework Rules

20 The provider states the “Terms of Service” for transacting or interacting with their online service The Terms must comply with the “online community” Trust Framework Rules, including accessibility, privacy, security, etc. The individual/receiver/consumer chooses which providers to interact with, in part based on the Terms offered “Terms of Service” AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 20

21 Identity Solutions Imagine some possible Terms of Service: “Give me these attributes, cryptographically signed by an Attribute Provider I recognize, so I can verify your eligibility” “Prove that you have authenticated successfully with an IdP I have a trust relationship with” “Prove that you did the authentication with a Level 4 Credential” That’s where they are – the ‘typical’ Identity Solutions and services are support mechanisms to enable Terms that leverage third party identity and credential services AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 21

22 Some Examples of “Terms” Business Payment / Money Information Eligibility Legal Contract / Agreement Terms and Conditions Lawfulness Technical Protocols & Standards Crypto capability Electronic Tokens & Credentials Other technical capabilities AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 22

23 Entering the Ecosystem An “online community” becomes a formal participant in the NSTIC ID Ecosystem through an Accreditation Program The Accreditation Program is being designed by teams in the IDESG The Accreditation Program will be documented within the ID Ecosystem Framework AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 23

24 ID Ecosystem Framework* the overarching set of interoperability standards, risk models, privacy and liability policies, requirements, and accountability mechanisms that structure the Identity Ecosystem AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 24 *Source: The NSTIC Strategy Document

25 Accreditation IDESG, via the Accreditation Authority: Assesses an “online community” and its participants against the Trust Framework (Operating Rules) defined by that particular “online community” Confers Trustmarks to signal to participants that Assessments and Accreditation has been done to a known standard AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 25

26 Accreditation Authority* assesses and validates identity providers, attribute providers, relying parties, and identity media, ensuring that they all adhere to an agreed-upon trust framework (the community’s trust framework) AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 26 *Source: The NSTIC Strategy Document

27 Trust Framework*, redux developed by a community defines the rights and responsibilities of that community’s participants specifies the policies and standards specific to the community defines the community-specific processes and procedures that provide assurance considers the level of risk associated with the transaction types of its participants AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 27 *Source: The NSTIC Strategy Document

28 Interoperable? Interoperability within an “online community” is a defining feature of “online communities” IDESG could foster technology, process and policy interoperability between “online communities” by defining common Accreditation Patterns for the inter- Community interactions IDESG, via the Accreditation Authority, could assess and issue Trustmarks for the inter-Community interactions AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 28

29 Recap “Online communities” set their own rules according to their members’ needs “Online communities” interact with each other in the NSTIC ID Ecosystem The rules of different “online communities” may be different Access to online services enabled by identity solutions is at the heart of the NSTIC ID Ecosystem IDESG serves to establish the ID Ecosystem Framework and Programs needed to identify and evaluate “online communities” seeking to participate in the NSTIC ID Ecosystem AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 29

30 NSTIC ID Ecosystem? AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 30 ID Ecosystem Framework Rules Arrows = Inter-community interactions

31 A “Community” Unit AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 31 e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms Community Trust Framework Rules e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms e-Service Provider e-Service Consumer Transaction Interaction Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms e-Service Provider e-Service Receiver Transaction Type- Interaction Type Terms of Service Fulfillment of Terms

32 Next Steps Develop narrative scenarios that explain what an individual might experience when seeking services or engaging with a provider of services Refine the concept of ‘Terms of Service’ Develop examples that explain how this new concept relates to real-world implementations Define the nature of ‘interoperable interactions’ between “online communities” What policy, protocol, technology or practice conditions must exist in order to be considered ‘interoperable’? Relate the conceptual model to other IDESG work products How does this model fit the work already completed in Standards, Security, Privacy, Functional Model, etc? AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 32

33 Your Feedback Please consider commenting on this slide deck at www.idimmusings.com Feedback, questions, concerns are welcome, please direct to AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com AndrewHughes3000@gmail.com - October 2013 - IDESG Version 33


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