Who Do You Want To Be Today? - HP and Microsoft Planning Identity
Systems Dominance
by Trevor Bauknight
Published on this site: June 10th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Dennis Miller once said that "Bill Gates is a monocle
and a Persian cat away from being a bad guy in a James Bond
movie." Last week, Hewlett-Packard announced that it,
along with Gates' Microsoft, is getting set to make a push
into yet another market currently dominated by small niche
players and Unix-based software platforms identity management
systems at the national level.
It makes you feel all warm and fuzzy doesn't it? The idea
of building a national identification system on a software
platform whose best claim to fame is its legendary lack of
security seems ludicrous at best; but there it is. Hewlett-Packard's
release of its National Identity System is based on Microsoft
software such as Microsoft Server 2003 Enterprise Edition,
Microsoft BizTalk Server 2004, Microsoft SQL Server 2000 (64-bit),
the Microsoft .NET Framework and Microsoft Services with HP
providing the hardware, integration and support.
The basic idea, according to the UK IT-tabloid The Register
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/05/31/hp_id_system/)
is to provide a modular structure for controlling access to electronic
government services and securing transactions (such as voting!)
between citizens and governments using plug-in features like the
ability to interface with various biometric systems.
The focus, for the moment, is on the world outside the United
States. Existing customers for the technology are the Italian
Interior Ministry, which is supplying all Italian citizens
with smart electronic national identity documents, and the
governments of Israel, Poland, Slovakia and Bulgaria. The
announcement seemed particularly relevant in England, which
is embroiled in a controversy over compulsory identification
cards.
So What's This About?
We can almost hope that this is about nothing more than money.
To be sure, there is lots of it involved. Industry analysts at Morgan
Keegan estimate that the identity market is expected to grow from
$4.8 billion last year to nearly $11 billion by 2007, and those
numbers may be conservative. A London School of Economics study
concluded that the rollout of a biometric ID card system in the
UK could cost as much as 18 billion pounds (in excess of $32 billion),
up sharply from the 5.8 billion pounds previously estimated by the
Home Office.
But there are bigger issues involved. These are issues of
trust and power relationships between governments, citizens
and corporations. A key player in all this is a privately-held
Swiss startup company (definitely one to watch) called WISeKey,
a pioneer in the field of Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)
and such esoterica as Quantum cryptography. WISeKey has set
itself up very quickly and firmly as one of only a few "global
trust providers", forging relationships with
technology giants like HP and Microsoft as well as with other
organizations, such as the HRD International Group, that facilitate
global trade.
WISeKey prides itself on its status as a "technodemocratic"
global trust provider, even capitalizing on its location in
Geneva, Switzerland, a country known for zealous neutrality
and overarching concern with privacy. Its appeal to Microsoft,
a company with commitment issues in the trust-relationship
department, therefore, is understandable. But what is the
benefit to you in putting so much trust in a private company
you've never heard of?
Who's Trusted in Trusted Computing?
Microsoft's efforts in the Trusted Computing initiative (code-named
"Palladium" and expected to be rolled out as part
of the long-awaited Longhorn update of Windows XP) have gotten
off to a rocky start. The Electronic Privacy Information Center
(EPIC)(http://www.epic.org/privacy/consumer/.../palladium.html)
maintains a good resource on the subject, and the opposition to
it seems to be having an effect.
Briefly, "Trusted Computing" seems to refer to
the efforts of large media and technological concerns to put
in place controls whereby they can trust each other, primarily,
and also trust you. Your trust for them is not at issue. Hard-shell
Open Source evangelists like Richard M. Stallman, however,
aren't amused.
Stallman's essay "Can You Trust Your Computer http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/can-you-trust.html
is a look at some logical extremes that must really be examined
to gain a full understanding of what's at stake. Stallman
argues that "treacherous computing", as he calls
it, is fundamentally about the development of unprecedented
notions of control and ownership of information and the overturning
of the whole body of legal and ethical ideas about that information.
He, of course, argues that Open Source alternatives like the GNU/Linux
operating system are the way forward, providing real trust through
transparency and open collaboration rather than by obfuscation and
grand security schemes. Stallman is well-known for such pronouncements
for the simple reason that he is quite often right.
But this is not to say that a middle way is not available.
We use Microsoft's improving products at Cafe ID http://www.cafeid.com
and do so, at least for now, without a deep sense of dread.
WISeKey's technology is superior, indeed; but we see it as
part of our job to insist that such technology is used to
provide real privacy and security to the end-user, and not
from the end-user.
Certainly, when it comes to implementing e-government's information
services, that principle should be the first requirement and
should be emphasized above all others. As long as the technology
makes the opposite approach feasible to implement, however,
our role in this borderless technodemocracy is to see that
that doesn't happen.

Trevor Bauknight is a web designer and writer with
over 15 years of experience on the Internet. He specializes
in the creation and maintenance of business and personal identity
online and can be reached at [email protected].
Stop by http://www.cafeid.com
for a free tryout of the revolutionary SiteBuildingSystem
and check out our Flash-based website and IMAP e-mail hosting
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