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dc.contributor.authorNorrington, Peteren_GB
dc.contributor.authorMaple, Carstenen_GB
dc.date.accessioned2013-03-04T12:10:42Z
dc.date.available2013-03-04T12:10:42Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.identifier.citationNorrington, P., and Maple, C. (2006) “Extending e-Government to e-Society: Usability Lessons from the UK ID Card Trial”, in IADIS International Conference e-Society, Dublin, Ireland, pp.296-304en_GB
dc.identifier.isbn972892416X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10547/270915
dc.description.abstractThe United Kingdom’s Government is embarking on an ambitious project to issue 60 million citizens with a biometric identity card. The card is intended not only to provide identity checking for access to public sector services but also for private sector ones, creating a gold standard identity document for both physical and online authentication. Whilst the many technological, legal and social issues of biometric systems are widely covered, little direct evaluation of usability issues appears in academic literature. We present unique first-hand evidence concerning the usability difficulties of biometric systems, evaluating this and making recommendations on the impact usability should have on the design, implementation and accreditation of biometric identity systems which employ the Identity Card Scheme in the private sector.
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherIADISen_GB
dc.relation.urlhttp://www.iadis.net/dl/final_uploads/200604F038.pdfen_GB
dc.subjectidentity cardsen_GB
dc.subjectbiometricsen_GB
dc.subjectauthenticationen_GB
dc.titleExtending e-government to e-society: usability lessons from the UK ID Card Trialen
dc.typeConference papers, meetings and proceedingsen
html.description.abstractThe United Kingdom’s Government is embarking on an ambitious project to issue 60 million citizens with a biometric identity card. The card is intended not only to provide identity checking for access to public sector services but also for private sector ones, creating a gold standard identity document for both physical and online authentication. Whilst the many technological, legal and social issues of biometric systems are widely covered, little direct evaluation of usability issues appears in academic literature. We present unique first-hand evidence concerning the usability difficulties of biometric systems, evaluating this and making recommendations on the impact usability should have on the design, implementation and accreditation of biometric identity systems which employ the Identity Card Scheme in the private sector.


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