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Corporate Watch report shows: Even IT industry doesn't trust ID cards

Corporate Watch | 23.01.2006 15:37 | Analysis

Corporate Watch scrutinises the companies angling to be involved in implementing the ID cards scheme if it becomes law, and looks at what IT industry insiders have said about ID card technology and the planned National Identity Register


Corporate Watch report shows: Even IT industry doesn't trust ID cards

"Corporate Identity - A critical analysis of private companies' engagement with the identity cards scheme"

The government's defeat in the House of Lords last week demonstrated growing unease at the secrecy surrounding the ID cards scheme.

In a new report, Corporate Watch(1) scrutinises the companies angling to be involved in implementing the scheme if it becomes law. Some of them have previously overseen disasters in public sector IT work. For example, contractor EDS was responsible for the catastrophic introduction of working tax credits where computer errors led to £2.2bn of overpayments and eventual termination of the contract.

The report uncovers misgivings circulating within the IT industry about biometric technology(2) and the National Identity Register database. It also reveals concerns from both companies and government bodies about transparency and accountability in government IT outsourcing processes. The report's author, Rebecca Spencer, expressed concern over the findings:

'We set out to review what companies are saying to each other about the ID cards scheme and found that even some of those bidding for contracts say privately that it will be a disaster. When technology companies like Unisys and QinetiQ are questioning ID cards, something has to be wrong.'(3)

The report concludes that neither the major contractors nor the government have shown themselves capable of organising and implementing an outsourced IT scheme on this scale. No country has attempted to use biometric technologies to register a population the size of the UK.

Corporate Watch's report recommends either sending the ID cards scheme back to the drawing board or amending it so that all elements of compulsion are removed and no individual is forced to deal with flawed technology.

View the report online at  http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/?lid=2298

Notes:

1) About Corporate Watch - Corporate Watch is a small, independent research group based in Oxford, working on profiling, publishing and exposing detrimental social and environmental effects companies have on people and the planet.

2) Atos Origin, one of the companies involved in trialling the cards, reported that: "Only 61% of disabled participants and 90% of the sample chosen to represent the general population were able to enrol two iris scans; verification of facial scans was 48% for disabled participants and 69% for the representative sample; fingerprint verification was around 80% for both groups. 0.62% of disabled participants were unable to enrol a single biometric". See: 'UK Passport Service Biometrics Enrolment Trial Report' May 2005 -  http://www.passport.gov.uk/downloads/UKPSBiometrics_Enrolment_Trial_Report.pdf

3) 'A national ID card for the UK is overly ambitious, extremely expensive and will not be a panacea against terrorism or fraud, although it will make a company like mine very happy.' Roberto Tavano, biometrics specialist for Unisys, one of the companies considering bidding for contracts. Quoted in The Guardian, 21/10/05
'The requirement for 100 per cent accuracy is huge and I don't think we've ever seen a system which is 100 per cent accurate.' Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, former chair of QinetiQ. Reported on 18/10/05 by silicon.com, 'Lack of "balls" in Whitehall will hinder ID cards' Will Sturgeon  http://www.silicon.com/publicsector/0,3800010403,39153447,00.htm

Corporate Watch
- Homepage: http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk

Comments

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sneaking it in via passports

26.01.2006 16:56

"Unlike other forms of information, such as credit card details, if core biometric details such as your fingerprints are compromised, it is not going to be possible to provide you with new ones," Mr Fishenden says. Using the same "identifiers" every time the ID card is presented is a "highly risky technical design" and could inadvertently broadcast personal information to fraudsters or private companies. Having to produce this much information for every service is "unnecessary" as systems could be designed to ensure that only the relevant data is revealed each time. "Would you be happy if online auction sites, casinos or car rental company employees are given the same identity information that provides you with access to your medical records?"

Jerry Fishenden, the national technology officer for Microsoft, in the Scotsman 18/10/05.


"The Government did, last year, say that it could add fingerprints to passports via the Royal Prerogative, but as all of the Passport Service's identity-related plans are going ahead with or without the ID Card Bill, clearly it's all happening under the Prerogative. Which you might reckon stretches the legal framework well beyond breaking point. Lack of Parliamentary oversight? You ain't seen nothing yet. It is practically impossible to justify the UK Passport Service's identity management plans as being encompassed by a Royal Prerogative intended simply to cover the granting and revoking of passports, even taking into account the requirements of new international standards."

 http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/01/23/idcard_passport_roots/

Danny


Yes, ID is coming in from many directions, not just this bill

01.02.2006 13:00

Although the Lords have now voted down compulsion through passports the threat still comes any of the following directions, plus the government is likely to ignore the Lords anyway:

* Passports - likely European directive on fingerprints as standard biometric for all EU Member States
* Driving licences - biometric additions forthcoming, plus the DVLA database is already open to access by private companies (esp. parking enforcement) who can get your name & address in an instant
* Forthcoming Childrens database(s)
* Electoral role - creation of a national list called CORE (Co-ordinated Online Record of Elector)

See:  http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/01/332642.html
See also:  http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/12/16/core_voting_system/

little brother