Biometrics: advanced identity verification
Biometrics: advanced identity verification
Identity management based on P3P
International workshop on Designing privacy enhancing technologies: design issues in anonymity and unobservability
Biometrics, Personal Identification in Networked Society: Personal Identification in Networked Society
Security Architecture of the Austrian Citizen Card Concept
ACSAC '02 Proceedings of the 18th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference
interactions - Funology
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
How to make secure email easier to use
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Privacy and identity management for everyone
Proceedings of the 2005 workshop on Digital identity management
Usability and privacy in identity management architectures
ACSW '07 Proceedings of the fifth Australasian symposium on ACSW frontiers - Volume 68
User-Centric Identity Management: New Trends in Standardization and Regulation
IEEE Security and Privacy
National e-ID card schemes: A European overview
Information Security Tech. Report
Usability is the best policy: public policy and the lived experience of transport systems in London
BCS-HCI '07 Proceedings of the 21st British HCI Group Annual Conference on People and Computers: HCI...but not as we know it - Volume 1
Privacy-enhancing technologies for the internet, II: five years later
PET'02 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Privacy enhancing technologies
Federated identity to access e-government services: are citizens ready for this?
Proceedings of the 2013 ACM workshop on Digital identity management
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This paper presents a framework for the design of human-centric identity management systems. Whilst many identity systems over the past few years have been labelled as human-centred, we argue that the term has been appropriated by technologists to claim moral superiority of their products, and by system owners who confuse administrative convenience with benefits for users. The framework for human-centred identity presented here identifies a set of design properties that can impact the lived experience of the individuals whose identity is being managed. These properties were identified through an analysis of public response to 15 historic national identity systems. They capture the practical design aspects of an identity system, from structural aspects that affect the flow of information - Control Points, Subject Engagement, Identity Exposure, Population Coverage--to the metrical aspects that considers how information is used and perceived--Expert Interpretation, Population Comprehension, Information Accuracy, Information Stability, Subject Coupling, Information Polymorphism. Any identity system can be described in terms of these fundamental properties, which affect individuals' lived experience, and therefore help to determine the acceptance or rejection of such systems. We first apply each individual property within the context of two national identity systems--the UK DNA Database and the Austrian Citizen Card, and then also demonstrate the applicability of the framework within the contexts of two non-government identity platforms--Facebook and Phorm. Practitioners and researchers would make use of this framework by analysing an identity system in terms of the various properties, and the interactions between these properties within the context of use, thus allowing for the development of the potential impacts that the system has on the lived experience.