Electronic identification

An electronic identification ("eID") is a digital solution for proof of identity of citizens or organizations, for example in view to access benefits or services provided by government authorities, banks or other companies, for mobile payments, etc. Apart from online authentication and login, many electronic identity services also give users the option to sign electronic documents with a digital signature.

One form of eID is an electronic identification card (eIC), which is a physical identity card that can be used for online and offline personal identification or authentication. The eIC is a smartcard in ID-1 format of a regular bank card, with identity information printed on the surface (such as personal details and a photograph) and in an embedded RFID microchip, similar to that in biometric passports. The chip stores the information printed on the card (such as the holder's name and date of birth) and the holder's photo(s). Several photos may be taken from different angles along with different facial expressions, thus allowing the biometric facial recognition systems to measure and analyze the overall structure, shape and proportions of the face.[1] It may also store the holder's fingerprints. The card may be used for online authentication, such as for age verification or for e-government applications. An electronic signature, provided by a private company, may also be stored on the chip.

Countries which currently issue government-issued eIDs include Afghanistan,[2] Bangladesh, Belgium, Bulgaria, Chile, Finland, Guatemala, Germany, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Mexico, Morocco, Pakistan,[3][4] Portugal, Poland, Romania, Estonia, Latvia,[5] Lithuania,[6] Spain, Slovakia,[7] Malta, and Mauritius. Germany, Uruguay and previously Finland have accepted government issued physical eIC:s. Norway, Sweden and Finland accept bank-issued eIDs (also known as BankID) for identification by government authorities. There are also an increasing number of countries applying electronic identification for voting (enrollment, issuing voter ID cards, voter identification and authentication, etc.), including those countries using biometric voter registration.

According to the EU electronic identification and trust services (eIDAS) Regulation, described as a pan-European login system, all organizations delivering public digital services in an EU member state shall accept electronic identification from all EU member states from September 29, 2018.[8][9]

Afghanistan

Afghanistan issued its first electronic ID card on May 3rd 2018. Afghan President Dr. Ashraf Ghani was the first who received his eID.[2] Afghan President was accompanied by First Lady Rula Ghani, his VP, Head of Afghan Senate, Head of Afghan Parliament, Chief Justice and other senior government officials. All these senior officials received their eIDs during the ceremony.[10]

The Afghan electronic ID is polycarbonate based card with covert and overt security features. The Card has an embedded chip which hosts applets with textual data, biometrics and electronic identity of the citizen.[11]

Belgium

Belgium has been issuing eIDs since 2003, and all identity cards issued since 2004 have been electronic, replacing the previous plastic card[12].

Chip contents

The eID card contains a chip containing:[13]

  • the same information as legible on the card
  • the address of the card holder
  • the identity - and signature keys and certificates

Using the eID

At home, the users can use their electronic IDs to log into specific websites (such as Tax-on-web, allowing them to fill in their tax form online).[14] To do this the user needs

  • an eID card
  • a smartcard reader
  • the eID middleware software

When other software (such as an Internet Browser) attempts to read the eID, the users are asked for confirmation for this action, and potentially even for their PIN.[14]

Other applications include signing emails with the user's eID certificate private key. Giving the public key to your recipients allows them to verify your identity.

Kids ID

Although legally Belgian citizens only have to carry an ID from the age of 12, as of March 2009,[15] a "Kids ID" has been introduced for children below this age, on a strictly voluntary basis. This ID, beside containing the usual information, also holds a contact number that people, or the child themselves, can call when they, for example, are in danger or had an accident. The card can be used for electronic identification after the age of six, and it does not contain a signing certificate as minors cannot sign a legally binding document. An important goal of the Kids-ID card is to allow children to join "youth-only" chatsites, using their eID to gain entrance. These sites would essentially block any users above a certain age from gaining access to the chat sessions, effectively blocking out potential pedophiles.

Bulgaria

Bulgaria introduced a limited scale proof-of-concept of electronic identity cards, called ЕИК (Eлектронна карта за идентичност), in 2013.

Costa Rica

Costa Rica plans to introduce facial recognition data into its national identification card.[16]

Croatia

Croatia introduced its electronic identity cards, called e-osobna iskaznica, on 8 June 2015.

Denmark

Electronic identities in Denmark issued by banks are called NemID. NemID authentication allows larger payments in MobilePay - a service used by more than half of the population as of 2017.

Estonia

The Estonian ID card is also used for authentication for Estonia's Internet-based voting system. In February 2007, Estonia was the first country to allow for electronic voting for parliamentary elections. Over 30,000 voters participated in the country's e-election.[17]

At end of 2014 Estonia extended the Estonian ID Card to non-residents. The target of the project is to reach 10 million residents by 2025, which is 8 times more than the Estonian population of 1.3 million.

Finland

The Finnish electronic ID[18] was first issued to citizens on 1 Dec 1999.

Germany

Germany introduced its electronic identity cards, called Personalausweis, in 2010.

Guatemala

Guatemala introduced its electronic identity card called DPI (Documento Personal de Identificación) on August 2010.

Israel

Electronic identity cards in Israel have been issued since July 2013. The EIC is not yet compulsory, it is issued free of charge to promote it, and is valid for 10 years.

Italy

Italy introduced its electronic identity cards, called Carta d'Identità Elettronica (in Italy identified with the acronym CIE), to replace the paper-based ID card in Italy. Since 4 July 2016, Italy is in the process of renewing all ID cards to electronic ID cards.

Latvia

eID and eSignature service provider in Latvia is called eParaksts

Malta

Since 12 February 2014, Malta is in the process of renewing all ID cards to electronic ID cards.

Mauritius

Mauritius has had electronic identity cards since 2013.

Mexico

Even they have been destroyed in 2018 and there were 3 million cards issued it was a great effort. Mexico had an intent to develop an official electronic biometric ID card for all youngsters under the age of 18 years and was called the Personal Identity Card (Record of Minors), which included the data verified on the birth certificate, including the names of the parents, a unique key of the Population Registry (CURP), a biometric facial recognition photograph, a scan of all 10 fingerprints, and an iris scan registration.[19]

Netherlands

Electronic identities in Netherlands are called DigiD and Netherlands is currently developing an eID scheme.

Nigeria

General Multi-purpose Electronic Identity Cards are issued by the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), a Federal Government agency under the Presidency. The NeID Card complies with ICAO standard 9303, ISO standard 7816-4., as well as GVCP for the MasterCard-supported payment applet. NIMC plans to issue 50m multilayer-polycarbonate cards, the first set being contact only, but also dual-interface with DESFire Emulation in the near future.

Norway

Electronic identities in Norway issued by banks are called BankID. They make it possible to log into Norwegian authorities, universities and banks, and to make larger payments using the Vipps mobile payment service, used by more than half of the population as of 2017. The Norwegian BankID på mobil service is utilizing the mobile phone SIM card for authentication, and is financed by a fee to the mobile network operator for each authentication.

Pakistan

Pakistan introduced the Computerized National Identity Card (CNIC) in 2000, with over 89.5 x CNICs issued by 2012.[20] In October 2012, the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) introduced the smart national identity card (SNIC), which contains a data chip and 36 security features. The SNIC complies with ICAO standard 9303 and ISO standard 7816-4. The SNIC can be used for both offline and online identification, voting, pension disbursement, social and financial inclusion programmes and other services.[3][4] NADRA aims to replace all 89.5 million CNICs with SNICs by 2020.

Spain

Electronic identity cards in Spain are called DNIe and have been issued since 2006.

Sweden

The most widespread electronic identification in Sweden is issued by banks and called BankID. The BankID may be in the form of a certificate file on disk, on card or on smart phones. The latter (Swedish mobile BankID service) was used by 84 percent of the Swedish population in 2019.[21] A Mobile BankID login does not require a fee since the service is provided by banks rather than mobile operators. It can be used both for authentication within various apps and web services on the same smart phone, and also for web pages on other devices. It also supports fingerprint and face recognition authentication on compatible iOS and Android devices.

Electronic IDs are used for secure web login to Swedish authorities, banks, health centers (allowing people to see their medical records and prescriptions and book doctors visits), and companies such as pharmacies. Mobile BankID also allows the Swish mobile payment service, utilized by 78 percent of the Swedish population in 2019, at first mainly for payments between individuals.[22] BankID was previously used for university applications and admissions, but this was prohibited by Swedbank since universities utilized the system for distribution of their own student logins. Increasingly, BankID is used as an added security for signing contracts.[23]

Sri Lanka

Since on 1 January 2016, Sri Lanka is in the process of developing a Smart Card based RFID E-National Identity Card which will replace the obsolete 'Laminated Type' cards by storing the holders information on a chip that can be read by banks, offices etc. thereby reducing the need to have documentation of these informations physically by storing in the cloud.

Turkey

In Turkey the e-Government (e-Devlet) Gateway is a largely scaled Internet site that provides access to all public services from a single point. The purpose of the Gateway is to present public services to the citizens, enterprises and public institutions effectively and efficiently with information and communication technologies.[24]

Uruguay

Uruguay has had electronic identity cards since 2015. The Uruguayan eID has a private key that allows to digitally sign documents, and has the user fingerprint stored in order to allow to verify the identity. It is also a valid travel document in some South American countries. As of 2017 the old laminated ID coexists with the new eID.

See also

References

  1. NIMC's national id specs
  2. "Afghan President Launches Controversial National ID Card". Voice of America. 3 May 2018. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  3. "Image: 04 nadra-04.jpg, (921 × 768 px)". nadra.gov.pk. 2012-11-08. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
  4. "Al Shamrani wins AFC Player of the Year award | Business Recorder". brecorder.com. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  5. "Latvijas Republikas Saeima - Electronic ID cards to be introduced in Latvia". saeima.lv. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  6. "ELEKTRONINĖ ASMENS TAPATYBĖS KORTELĖ - ASMENS TAPATYBĖS KORTELĖ (ATK) » Bendra informacija". eid.lt. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  7. "eID karta". slovensko.sk. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  8. Info on eIDAS, Connectis.
  9. Regulation (EU) No 910/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 July 2014
  10. "Ghani Receives First Electronic ID Card". Tolo News. 3 May 2018. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  11. "MCIT signed National ID Project with GTR (Grand Technology Resources)". Afghanistan Ministry of Communication and IT. 19 December 2010. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  12. "FAQ - eID - IBZ Institutions et Population". www.ibz.rrn.fgov.be. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
  13. "Over de eID (FAQ)" (in Dutch). Belgian federal government (fedict). Archived from the original on 2009-08-04. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
  14. "De elektronische identiteitskaart (eID) (Internet Explorer)" (PDF) (in Dutch). Belgian federal government (fedict). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-10-08. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
  15. "Kids-ID Presentation" (in French, Dutch, and German). Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  16. Fingerprint and Facial Recognition Will Be the New ‘ID Cards’ of Costa Ricans
  17. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-03-01. Retrieved 2012-12-09.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) idBlog - The number of electronic voters tripled
  18. "Electronic Identity and Certificates". Retrieved 2018-06-30.Finnish electronic ID
  19. "Inicio - Registro Nacional de Población e Identificación Personal". renapo.gob.mx. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  20. "89.5mln CNICs issued; 95 pc population covered - Pakistan State Times". pstimes.com. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
  21. The Swedes and the Internet 2019 summary
  22. Svenskarna och internet 2019 - Banktjänster och e-handel
  23. How to sign contract with BankID
  24. About Turkish e-Devlet
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