While privacy remains a major concern for people around the
world, a majority of consumers would share personal data if they
knew the information was securely protected and if sharing it would
make their lives easier, according to Unisys Corp's Global Study on
the Public's Perceptions about Identity Management.
The study, released this week, was independently conducted by
the Ponemon Institute to capture the perceptions of individuals in
North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Latin America on methods
and technologies for managing identity within business and
government organizations, Unisys said. In addition, the study
looked at how individualsb sense of privacy affects their views on
new ID management technologies such as biometrics.
b The No. 1 issue we were interested in exploring and we were
interested to learn about was attitudes in different regions of the
world regarding authentication technology use and acceptability,b
said Mark Cohn, vice president for homeland security solutions at
Unisys.
b There have been a lot of concerns about privacy and a lot of
issues where businesses and government have been trying to deal
with authentication problems but in sort of an isolated way," he
said. What Unisys wanted to know was if there were "some kind of
convergence and interoperability standards, would people be
comfortable or uncomfortable with that.b
Cohn said Unisysb thesis was that a single, general strategy for
ID authentication that could be adopted by businesses and
governments -- and was interoperable worldwide -- would be more
efficient than the varying systems now in place.
b Thereb s an opportunity to save money, do a better job with
security and be more convenient for consumers if people are
comfortable with a convergence study,b he said.
What the study found was that in every region of the world,
people would accept an identification strategy such as the use of a
multipurpose ID or smart card that could serve as a driverb s
license and an ATM card and could be used to pay tolls or for
border crossings, Cohn said. A personb s health records could also
be put on it, he said.
b So itb s a secure ID that can store multiapplication data for
multiple purposes,b Cohn said. b And they put right on there digital
certificates -- PKI certificates -- for encryption and
authentications. So now that same card can be used for Internet
commerce to prove you are who you claim to be. This card could be
used for 14 different purposes. Web ve issued about 17 million to
people in Malaysia who voluntarily choose what they want their card
to be used for. Other countries are doing it as well, but these
systems are not interoperable.b
Unisys also asked people about who they trusted to protect their
privacy, who they trusted to be ID card issuers in different
regions of the world and what technology, such as biometrics, would
they be willing to use, he said.
b We asked at what level are you comfortable having your
fingerprints taken, because there are a lot of cultures where it
was thought there were a lot of objections to that,b Cohn said.
b But we found that those objections arenb t as prevalent as we
thought.b
The study also found that 46 percent of respondents trust
banking institutions to issue and manage a multi-purpose identity
credential, and 45 percent said they favor establishing a
government agency to issue such cards. By contrast, only 40 percent
said they trust the police to issue identity credentials, and 38
percent said they favor having a private company issue ID
cards.
More than 68 percent of respondents believe it is important for
the credential to work across international borders.
North American and Asia-Pacific consumers were willing to share
more personal data -- and preferred doing so with a government
agency rather than a business -- than Europeans and Latin
Americans. In contrast, respondents in Latin America were more
willing to share personal data with a business rather than
government.
Additional findings on biometrics include:
-- Eighty-two percent said convenience -- not having to remember
separate passwords or other log-in data -- is the top reason they
support biometrics. And more than three-quarters of consumers cited
speeding up the ID verification process as their main reason for
backing biometrics.
-- Seventy-one percent of consumers from North America support
the use of biometrics for ID verification -- more than any other
region -- followed by 69 percent of Europeans and 68 percent of
residents of Asia-Pacific. Only 58 percent of Latin Americans
support biometrics for identity verification.
-- Thirty-two percent said voice recognition is their preferred
authentication method, followed by fingerprints (27 percent),
facial scans (20 percent), hand geometry (12 percent) and iris
scans (10 percent) -- perhaps reflecting more consumer awareness
of, and experience with, voice and fingerprint biometrics.
North Americans are more leery of facial scans than residents of
other regions, with just 10 percent citing that method, compared
with 27 percent in Europe, 23 percent in Asia-Pacific and 20
percent in Latin America.
Of those respondents who do not favor biometrics for identity
verification, almost three-quarters are suspicious of the
technology, and 62 percent said they prefer nonbiometric
identification methods.