meat suit
9th March 2021, 16:54
Omg, what an absolute monster... from the UK gov website
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-uk-digital-identity-and-attributes-trust-framework/the-uk-digital-identity-and-attributes-trust-framework#introduction
they cant wait to get us chipped....
excerpts from the documents copied as I was reading :
The trust framework approach is gaining traction globally - Canada, Australia, Sweden and New Zealand are taking this route. We will continue to work with our international partners to make sure our standards are interoperable with those adopted abroad, so in the future you can use your digital identity around the world and UK businesses can trust digital identities created elsewhere.
Example
Carmen needs to travel to Ghana for work. She must prove that she’s had a yellow fever vaccination before she can enter the country.
Carmen will get an International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis (ICVP) that confirms she’s had the vaccination. Whoever gave Carmen the vaccine can add the information from this certificate as attributes to Carmen’s personal data store app (sometimes known as a ‘digital wallet’).
This attribute can be shared with the Ghana Immigration Service before Carmen arrives in the country. This will mean she has to take fewer documents with her when she travels and will spend less time at the border.
2.2 Manage digital identity accounts
You must manage any digital identity accounts users choose to create with your organisation. This means you’ll need a way to suspend, close, recover and make changes to accounts.
You can close an account if the user:
has used the account to do something illegal
has not followed the terms of use they agreed to
wants to close it
has died
5.15 Things you must not do as part of the trust framework (‘prohibited conduct’)
When doing anything related to the trust framework, you (including any third party using services from the framework) must not do anything that’s illegal in the UK. This could include:
selling illegal goods, substances or services
promoting acts of violence or terror
bribery
fraud
conspiracy
copyright infringement
breaching data protection legislation
breaching financial regulations
breaking the law in any other way
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-uk-digital-identity-and-attributes-trust-framework/the-uk-digital-identity-and-attributes-trust-framework#introduction
they cant wait to get us chipped....
excerpts from the documents copied as I was reading :
The trust framework approach is gaining traction globally - Canada, Australia, Sweden and New Zealand are taking this route. We will continue to work with our international partners to make sure our standards are interoperable with those adopted abroad, so in the future you can use your digital identity around the world and UK businesses can trust digital identities created elsewhere.
Example
Carmen needs to travel to Ghana for work. She must prove that she’s had a yellow fever vaccination before she can enter the country.
Carmen will get an International Certificate of Vaccination or Prophylaxis (ICVP) that confirms she’s had the vaccination. Whoever gave Carmen the vaccine can add the information from this certificate as attributes to Carmen’s personal data store app (sometimes known as a ‘digital wallet’).
This attribute can be shared with the Ghana Immigration Service before Carmen arrives in the country. This will mean she has to take fewer documents with her when she travels and will spend less time at the border.
2.2 Manage digital identity accounts
You must manage any digital identity accounts users choose to create with your organisation. This means you’ll need a way to suspend, close, recover and make changes to accounts.
You can close an account if the user:
has used the account to do something illegal
has not followed the terms of use they agreed to
wants to close it
has died
5.15 Things you must not do as part of the trust framework (‘prohibited conduct’)
When doing anything related to the trust framework, you (including any third party using services from the framework) must not do anything that’s illegal in the UK. This could include:
selling illegal goods, substances or services
promoting acts of violence or terror
bribery
fraud
conspiracy
copyright infringement
breaching data protection legislation
breaching financial regulations
breaking the law in any other way