Date: 4/03/2020 18:10:02
From: Ian
ID: 1509290
Subject: National ID Rollout by Stealth

https://idm.net.au/article/0012771-australias-national-digital-id-here-governments-not-talking-about-it

The Australian government’s Digital Transformation Agency (DTA) has spent more than A$200 million over the past five years developing a National Digital ID platform. If successful, the project could streamline commerce, resolve bureaucratic quagmires, and improve national security. The emerging results of the project may give the Australian public cause for concern.

Two mobile apps built on the DTA’s Trusted Digital Identification Framework (TDIF) have recently been released to consumers. The apps, myGovID and Digital ID, were developed by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) and Australia Post, respectively.

Both apps were released without fanfare or glossy marketing campaigns to entice users. This is in keeping with more than five years of stealthy administrative decision-making and policy development in the National Digital ID project.

Now, it seems, we are set to hear more about it. An existing digital identity scheme for businesses called AUSkey will be retired and replaced with the new National Digital ID in March, and the DTA has recently put out a contract for a “Digital Identity Communication and Engagement Strategy”.

The DTA’s renewed investment in public communications is a welcome change of pace, but instead of top-down decision-making, why not try consultation and conversation?

…The difference in this case is that Identity Providers will control, store and manage all user information – which is likely to include birth certificates, marriage certificates, tax returns, medical histories, and perhaps eventually biometrics and behavioural information too.

There are currently two government organisations offering Identity Service Providers: the Australian Tax Office (ATO) and Australia Post. By their nature, Identity Providers consolidate information in one place and risk becoming a single point of failure. This exposes users to harms associated with the possibility of stolen or compromised personal information.

Reply Quote

Date: 4/03/2020 18:31:18
From: Ian
ID: 1509294
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

https://www.innovationaus.com/digital-id-gets-a-pr-makeover/

The government is planning a major communications campaign around its troubled digital identity project, which has been readied to move into its next phase.

The move comes as the beta version of the government’s digital identity service – myGovID – has had an underwhelming reception. The service has received a rating of just 2.4 out of 5 from more than 200 reviews on the Apple App Store, and a rating of 1.7 out of 5 from 308 reviews on Google Play.

The use of myGovID is set to significantly increase after it replaces the ageing AUSkey system, starting in March.

GovPass is the federal government’s overarching digital identity project. It aims to be a whole-of-government way to verify identity across a range of government and private sector services. It is split into four elements: the Trusted Digital Identity Framework, the exchange gateway, the digital identity services and the service providers.

…“Australia’s history of identity related projects raises concern for some stakeholders and is a central consideration of the digital identity program. The design is based on the critical principles of people having choice of identity provider, privacy and security by design and being opt in,” the DTA said.

The DTA has previously rejected concerns that GovPass will be a repeat of the doomed Australia Card, instead arguing that it will be “privacy enhancing”.

Applications to run the communications strategy close at the end of the weekend, with work starting on 10 February.

Focus group testing conducted by the DTA finding that two-thirds of Australians won’t use a digital identity unless there is a significant successful public awareness campaign.

The focus groups, which took place in March last year, found an overwhelming preoccupation with security and privacy and a reluctance to use the service unless these concerns are fully explained and assured.

—-

I stumbled on this thing a couple of days ago after signing up for the Australia Post parcel tracking system. That led me straight into the sign on to this new National ID.

Reply Quote

Date: 4/03/2020 22:48:12
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1509364
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

Well at least we know that those who oppose a national ID are criminals.

Reply Quote

Date: 4/03/2020 22:52:55
From: sibeen
ID: 1509368
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

mollwollfumble said:


Well at least we know that those who oppose a national ID are criminals.

WTF?

The last time a national ID was mooted it was during the Hawke/Keating era. The Australia card. One of the leaders in opposition to the card was The Australian newspaper. I wonder what their policy would be nowdays.

Reply Quote

Date: 4/03/2020 23:03:26
From: ChrispenEvan
ID: 1509369
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

sibeen said:


mollwollfumble said:

Well at least we know that those who oppose a national ID are criminals.

WTF?

The last time a national ID was mooted it was during the Hawke/Keating era. The Australia card. One of the leaders in opposition to the card was The Australian newspaper. I wonder what their policy would be nowdays.

and we all know what happened in Melb when they tried ID checks.

Reply Quote

Date: 5/03/2020 03:27:23
From: Ian
ID: 1509434
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

mollwollfumble said:


Well at least we know that those who oppose a national ID are criminals.

It will be perfect. Perfect data about every aspect of a person’s life. A perfect, incorruptible, secure system to input, store, retrieve and match a person with their digital ID. A perfectly honest government with perfect laws. Perfect.

The criminals will be quaking in their boots.

Reply Quote

Date: 5/03/2020 18:04:36
From: Ian
ID: 1509801
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

IDs and the Illusion of Security

Bruce Schneier San Francisco Chronicle February 3, 2004

In recent years there has been an increased use of identification checks as a security measure. Airlines always demand photo IDs, and hotels increasingly do so. They’re often required for admittance into government buildings, and sometimes even hospitals. Everywhere, it seems, someone is checking IDs. The ostensible reason is that ID checks make us all safer, but that’s just not so. In most cases, identification has very little to do with security.

Let’s debunk the myths:

First, verifying that someone has a photo ID is a completely useless security measure. All the Sept. 11 terrorists had photo IDs. Some of the IDs were real. Some were fake. Some were real IDs in fake names, bought from a crooked DMV employee in Virginia for $1,000 each. Fake driver’s licenses for all 50 states, good enough to fool anyone who isn’t paying close attention, are available on the Internet. Or if you don’t want to buy IDs online, just ask any teenager where to get a fake ID.

Harder-to-forge IDs only help marginally, because the problem is not making sure the ID is valid. This is the second myth of ID checks: that identification combined with profiling can be an indicator of intention.

Our goal is to somehow identify the few bad guys scattered in the sea of good guys. In an ideal world, what we would want is some kind of ID that denotes intention. We’d want all terrorists to carry a card that says “evildoer” and everyone else to carry a card that said “honest person who won’t try to hijack or blow up anything.” Then, security would be easy. We would just look at people’s IDs and, if they were evildoers, we wouldn’t let them on the airplane or into the building.

This is, of course, ridiculous, so we rely on identity as a substitute. In theory, if we know who you are, and if we have enough information about you, we can somehow predict whether you’re likely to be an evildoer. This is the basis behind CAPPS-2, the government’s new airline passenger profiling system. People are divided into two categories based on various criteria: the traveler’s address, credit history and police and tax records; flight origin and destination; whether the ticket was purchased by cash, check or credit card; whether the ticket is one way or round trip; whether the traveler is alone or with a larger party; how frequently the traveler flies; and how long before departure the ticket was purchased.

Profiling has two very dangerous failure modes. The first one is obvious. Profiling’s intent is to divide people into two categories: people who may be evildoers and need to be screened more carefully, and people who are less likely to be evildoers and can be screened less carefully.

But any such system will create a third, and very dangerous, category: evildoers who don’t fit the profile. Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, Washington-area sniper John Allen Muhammed and many of the Sept. 11 terrorists had no previous links to terrorism. The Unabomber taught mathematics at UC Berkeley. The Palestinians have demonstrated that they can recruit suicide bombers with no previous record of anti-Israeli activities. Even the Sept. 11 hijackers went out of their way to establish a normal-looking profile; frequent-flier numbers, a history of first-class travel and so on. Evildoers can also engage in identity theft, and steal the identity — and profile — of an honest person. Profiling can result in less security by giving certain people an easy way to skirt security.

There’s another, even more dangerous, failure mode for these systems: honest people who fit the evildoer profile. Because evildoers are so rare, almost everyone who fits the profile will turn out to be a false alarm. This not only wastes investigative resources that might be better spent elsewhere, but it causes grave harm to those innocents who fit the profile. Whether it’s something as simple as “driving while black” or “flying while Arab,” or something more complicated such as taking scuba lessons or protesting the Bush administration, profiling harms society because it causes us all to live in fear…not from the evildoers, but from the police.

Security is a trade-off; we have to weigh the security we get against the price we pay for it. Better trade-offs are to spend money on intelligence and analysis, investigation and making ourselves less of a pariah on the world stage. And to spend money on the other, nonterrorist security issues that affect far more Americans every year.

Identification and profiling don’t provide very good security, and they do so at an enormous cost. Dropping ID checks completely, and engaging in random screening where appropriate, is a far better security trade-off. People who know they’re being watched, and that their innocent actions can result in police scrutiny, are people who become scared to step out of line. They know that they can be put on a “bad list” at any time. People living in this kind of society are not free, despite any illusionary security they receive. It’s contrary to all the ideals that went into founding the United States.

Reply Quote

Date: 5/03/2020 18:09:44
From: Cymek
ID: 1509811
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

making ourselves less of a pariah on the world stage.

This is interesting I wonder how many US citizens think “Hmm we shitted off and/or bombed lots of people minding their own business perhaps they might want payback”

Reply Quote

Date: 5/03/2020 18:16:55
From: Ian
ID: 1509827
Subject: re: National ID Rollout by Stealth

Cymek said:


making ourselves less of a pariah on the world stage.

This is interesting I wonder how many US citizens think “Hmm we shitted off and/or bombed lots of people minding their own business perhaps they might want payback”

Dunno how Yanks think.. they’re a weird lot.

But the arguments about the usefulness of ID checking apply here as well.

Reply Quote