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Identity Cards in the UK

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Title: Identity Cards in the UK


1
Identity Cards in the UK
  • Dr Edgar A. Whitley
  • e.a.whitley_at_lse.ac.uk
  • Reader in Information Systems
  • Information Systems Group, Department of
    Management
  • London School of Economics and Political Science
  • Research coordinator LSE Identity Project
  • http//identityproject.lse.ac.uk

2
Identity Cards in the UK
  • Where have we been? Where are we going?

3
Timeline to current situation
4
First World War
  • Register of population 15-65
  • Prelude to military and industrial conscription
  • Loss of interest when Register reported 1,413,900
    men in England and Wales were still available for
    National Service

5
Second World War
  • Second National Register
  • Co-ordinating national service, national security
    and administration of rationing
  • 1950 Clarence Willcock stopped by police and
    asked to show ID card
  • Lord Goddard to demand a card from all and
    sundry is wholly unreasonable
  • 39 agencies were using card for various purposes
    when it was abandoned

6
2002 Efficient public services
  • After the terrorist atrocities in the United
    States on 11 September 2001, I was asked whether
    the Government was considering introducing
    identity cards. I said at the time that any
    debate about identity cards should not centre
    exclusively on issues of national security. Far
    more important are the issues of citizenship and
    entitlement to services and it is in this context
    that I would like to see the debate unfold.
    David Blunkett

7
Consultation
  • On plans to create an entitlement card that
    allows citizens to gain access to public services
  • Substantial commitment to some form of identity
    card, a term the public preferred to the term
    entitlement card

8
2004 The Bill Version 1
  • Identity Cards Bill published 29 November
  • Ran out of time in Parliament and effectively
    fell in March 2005

9
2005 Labour Manifesto
  • We will introduce ID cards, including biometric
    data like fingerprints, backed up by a national
    register and rolling out initially on a voluntary
    basis as people renew their passports

10
Design of the scheme
  • National Identity Register
  • Use of biometrics face, finger, iris
  • Online verification done everywhere
  • Audit trail of verifications
  • Use by and payment from the private sector
  • Paid for by the public

11
Multiple purposes
  • Must prevent identity theft
  • Must prevent terrorism
  • Must be in accordance with international
    obligations
  • Must be designed by the Home Office
  • Must enable e-government and access to government
    services

12
2005 The Bill version 2
  • Reintroduced after General Election
  • First reading May 2005

13
The LSE Identity Project Main report 27 June
2005
  • Evaluated the impact of identity cards on
    national security, organized crime and terrorism
    policing race, discrimination and immigration
    and identity fraud.
  • Reviewed the use of biometrics, the security and
    safety of the National Identity Register as well
    as international obligations on identity
    documents and the legal environment in the UK.

14
  • Considered issues of public trust and the
    government IT environment in the UK
  • Presented an alternative blueprint for identity
    management in the UK

15
LSE analysis not popular
  • Some of the figures banded around about cost are
    absolutely absurd- Tony Blair
  • Mr Clarke said it was technically incompetent
    and contained figures that were simply mad. He
    accused the LSE of running a campaign against ID
    cards. - Times Editorial, July 3, 2005

16
After Parliamentary debate
  • Legislation is passed March 2006
  • Scheme virtually identical to 2002 model
  • Amendment on cost reporting (s37 report)
  • New agency UK Identity and Passport Service
    launched on April 1st 2006
  • James Hall (ex Accenture) appointed Chief
    Executive October 2006

17
Formal reviews
18
OGC Gateway reviews
  • Gateway Review 0 June 2003
  • Gateway Review 0 (strategic assessment) January
    2004
  • Gateway Review 1 (business justification) July
    2005
  • Gateway Review 0 (strategic assessment) January
    2006
  • Gateway Review 2 (procurement strategy) April
    2006

19
KPMG
  • Cost Methodology and Cost Review
  • Outline Business Case Review
  • Extract published 7 November 2005
  • We conclude that the methodology used to cost
    the ID Cards proposals is robust and appropriate
    for this stage of development

20
Parliamentary comment
  • We are not saying that we can go from what we
    have now to a database covering 60-odd million
    people overnight, hoping and praying that the IT
    and the procurement will work and that everything
    will be successful. We have learned the lessons
    of the past, and this project has to be rolled
    out on a phased basis Tony McNulty 18 October
    2005

21
  • Projects such as this will always face such
    challenges and opinions in the field of
    technology will differ. However, the body of
    representations within industry, existing project
    experience and research by established experts in
    the field of biometrics and database technology
    indicate that we are right to proceed with our
    plans at this stage Baroness Scotland 31 October
    2005

22
  • The scheme has been through a series of gateway
    reviews, and that directly builds on experience
    learned from past failures. Some of the people
    involved in the process have been involved in
    other major public and private sector
    procurement. Obviously, they have clearly
    learned the lessons and know exactly what they
    are doing now Andy Burnham 13 February 2006

23
  • I cannot comment on a hypothetical problem. I am
    not anticipating something major that would
    completely delay or derail the programme. I would
    like to reassure the committee that nothing is
    more important than getting this right Joan Ryan
    14 June 2006

24
Procurement process starts immediately
25
Leaked emails Sunday Times 9 July 2006
  • Also even if everything went perfectly (which it
    will not) it is very debatable (given performance
    of Govt ICT projects) whether whatever TNIR The
    National Identity Register turns out to be (and
    that is a worry in itself) can be procured,
    delivered, tested and rolled out in just over two
    years and whether the resources exist within Govt
    and industry to run two overlapping procurements

26
Continued
  • What benchmark in the Home Office do we have
    that suggests that this is even remotely
    feasible? I conclude that we are setting
    ourselves up to fail Email from David Foord, OGC
    Sent 8 June 2006

27
  • I am not anticipating something major that would
    completely delay or derail the programme Joan
    Ryan 14 June 2006
  • I conclude that we are setting ourselves up to
    fail David Foord 9 June 2006

28
More reviews
  • John Reid Full scale review of all Home Office
    operations
  • In December, the Government will be publishing
    plans for the introduction of the National
    Identity Scheme which will provide more detail on
    the contribution which existing assets could make
    to the delivery of the scheme

29
Sir James Crosby
  • Chancellor appoints Sir James Crosby to lead
    Public Private Forum on Identity
  • Reports back April 2007
  • James Hall IPS procurement will start next
    summer

30
A radical redesign?
31
  • The review identified that there may be existing
    technical infrastructure and systems that could
    be used as the basis for reducing the delivery
    and cost risks associated with the identity card
    project

32
  • I did not mean to imply that a solution might
    involve stringing a number of legacy databases
    together. That has never been part of this
    proposition. We have always said that our
    requirements are for a data repository that could
    be populated one record at a time Katherine
    Courtney

33
  • A change in the way in which the scheme is to be
    phased in would require considerable reworking of
    the current identity cards business plan and
    procurement strategy. This would create further
    delay in the programme and so could add to costs
    Baroness Scotland

34
Biometrics
35
Testing biometric technology
  • The goal of the Trial was to test the processes
    and record customer experience and attitude
    during the recording and verification of facial,
    iris and fingerprint biometrics, rather than test
    or develop the biometric technology itselfit was
    not a technology trial. We will be undertaking
    further trials and testing in due course but do
    not have any immediate plans for further trials
    at this stage

36
  • We anticipate piloting the recording of
    fingerprints as a second biometric from
    volunteers in late 2007. This prepares the UK to
    match mandated EU standards for both fingerprint
    and facial biometrics for Schengen area
    passports

37
Biometrics in s37 report
  • Discussion of expanding fingerprinting
  • No explicit mention of iris scanning

38
Likely future problems
39
Departmental buy-in
40
HMRC
  • has, in consultation with the identity cards
    programme, developed its current best estimate of
    the costs and benefits of using the ID cards
    scheme to enhance its services and these have
    been incorporated into the business case

41
DWP
  • has, in consultation with the identity cards
    programme, developed its current best estimate of
    the cost of using the ID cards scheme to support
    the services which it oversees and these costs
    have been incorporated into the business case

42
  • They are not running to us with cheques Andy
    Burnham
  • Public sector buy-in as part of Sir James
    Crosbys Public Private Forum on Identity
    Management

43
Verifications
44
  • Cost of verification
  • Base case 0.57
  • Least appealing 2.00

45
Biometric or PIN verification?
  • Biometrics are being used to more strongly tie a
    verified identity to an individual. In this way,
    biometrics can be used along with an ID card to
    verify that identity against the record held for
    that card. Other forms of authentication, such as
    PIN numbers and passwords can be stolen along
    with a card so are much weaker at linking a
    person to an identity Andy Burnham

46
Liability
47
  • Society will depend on the integrity of the
    system
  • to establish the eligibility of each party to
    conduct a transaction
  • to assign the limitations of liability in the
    event of a failure
  • Government proposals are currently unclear on
    this point

48
Security issues
49
Security issues
  • Flash and go verifications
  • Confidence in the security and integrity of the
    system
  • August 2006 Office staff in the Home Office had
    breached the security of the passport database.
    Such problems would not arise with the identity
    cards database as this would be a completely
    different system

50
Scope shift
51
  • 2005 International obligations
  • US visa waiver scheme requirements for passports
    to contain a facial biometric from October 2006
  • EU mandate of both facial biometrics (August
    2008) and fingerprints (2009) for Member States
    passports within the Schengen area

52
  • 2005 Terrorism
  • John Humphries If we'd had ID cards, it would
    have made no difference yesterday (July 7 2005),
    would it?
  • Charles Clarke I doubt it. I doubt it would have
    made a difference, and I've never argued and
    don't argue that ID cards would prevent any
    particular act.

53
  • 2005 November Identity fraud
  • Up from 1.3 billion in 2002 to 1.7 billion in
    2006
  • Including 400 million not included in the 2002
    study
  • The figures reveal that, rather than shooting
    up, losses from credit and debit card ID theft
    fell by 7 during the six months to June 30from
    16.1m to 15m November 2006

54
  • 2006 November Illegal immigration
  • Companies are expected to verify the legal status
    of employees and can face large fines for
    employing illegal workers
  • 23 prosecutions under the Asylum and Immigration
    Act between 1999 and 2003
  • Home Office used a firm that supplied five
    illegal immigrants who worked as cleaners at the
    Immigration and Nationality Directorate

55
  • 2006 November Modernity
  • We need ID cards to secure our borders and ease
    modern life. The case for ID cards is a case
    not about liberty but about the modern world
  • Intellectually, technological determinism seemed
    to us to reduce the intimate intertwining of
    society and technology to a simple
    causeandeffect sequence

56
Multiple purposes revisited
  • Must help prevent identity theft
  • Must help prevent terrorism
  • Must be in accordance with some international
    obligations
  • Must be designed by the Home Office
  • Must enable e-government and access to government
    services

57
It is currently planned that the first identity
cards for UK citizens will be issued from 2009
58
Further information
  • http//identityproject.lse.ac.uk
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