Agencies, academia to confront digital ID challenges
Several agencies have joined forces with the private sector and academia to tackle challenges associated with managing the digital identities of individuals in government and industry databases.
Those challenges include identity theft, financial fraud, computer crime, information security, travel and immigration, document fraud, and data breaches. They increasingly affect every aspect of society including commerce, government entitlement programs, public safety and national security.
The Center for Applied Identity Management Research includes 19 organizations, including Indiana University, the Defense Department, U.S. Marshals Service and the U.S. Secret Service.
Federal agencies continue to grapple with problems in identity management, including the need for new policies and technologies for secure information-sharing between systems, said Thomas Dee, director of defense biometrics in the office of the Secretary of Defense.
“If we identify someone who tried to blow up a bomb against U.S. forces in Iraq today, how can we ensure that person is identified and stopped if he tries to cross the border into the United States five years from now?” Dee said.
The key is to securely share identity information between the source of the information and other agencies, including Customs and Border Protection agents who control access at the borders, Dee said.
Some of the pieces are already in place with programs such as the U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology, which takes fingerprints from foreign visitors and checks them against various terrorist databases, Dee added.