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May 26, 2005 4:16 PM PDT

HP aims to help governments check IDs

  • 2 comments
Hewlett-Packard launched a product on Friday that helps governments check the digital identity of citizens.

The technology, called the HP National Identity System, is designed to be used in conjunction with a number of Microsoft products, including its .Net line of server, database and middleware programs. The companies plan to jointly develop, market and offer training for the authentication system.

The product can be used to authenticate visitors to government Web sites, to control access to services and manage citizens' online identity, HP said.

In addition, the new product includes technology to make ID documents--such as passports, driver's licenses and identity cards--more secure and "intelligent," the company said. The technology can fulfill new secure ID requirements designed to heighten security at national borders, the company said.

The National Identity System can handle numerous tasks, including online and offline identity verification, live capture of demographic and biometric data, and secure access to documents. It's also compatible with various biometric identification systems and incorporates public key infrastructure and digital signatures, the company said.

The governments of Italy, Poland, Slovakia and Bulgaria have already begun to use the tools, HP said.

See more CNET content tagged:
biometric identification, e-government, middleware, government, Microsoft .NET

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Selling technology to the Nazis
by My-Self May 26, 2005 9:42 PM PDT
This 'Perspective' column, published by C-Net in 2002 takes a new meaning ...

"Why did the trains run on time to Auschwitz and Treblinka? How did the Nazis calculate exactly how many Jews should be emptied out of the ghettos each day and dispatched to death camps? How did the Third Reich systemize the plunder of Polish natural resources?"
http://news.com.com/Selling+technology+to+the+Nazis/2010-1071_3-876539.html

Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it.
George Santayana
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How bad can it get?
by Michael Grogan May 27, 2005 2:10 PM PDT
Like it's not bad enough that the gov is throwing our freedom out the window, along with the constitution, now they're gonna use M$ tech to do it? Who is stupid enough to trust M$ with anything that needs to work, let alone security issues?
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