Gartner supports HK smart ID card use

R. A. Hettinga rah at shipwright.com
Wed Apr 24 10:27:59 EDT 2002


http://technology.scmp.com/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic+FTContentServer?pagename=SCMP/Printacopy&aid=ZZZ2HRQ0B0D





Tuesday, April 23, 2002
Gartner supports HK smart ID card use


DOUG NAIRNE

Research firm Gartner has issued a favourable report on Hong Kong's
contentious smart identification card programme, saying the initiative will
put Hong Kong at the forefront of deploying the technology.

Dion Wiggins, research director at Gartner Group in Hong Kong, said the SAR
was continuing its history of pioneering smart card use with its decision
to issue ID cards with an embedded chip to all residents.

"Once implemented, Hong Kong will be well-positioned to deliver efficient
government services as well as provide greater security, community
benefits, access and streamlined secure e-commerce to its entire
population," Mr Wiggins wrote in a briefing paper last week.

"The implementation of the [smart card] project will take Hong Kong a long
way towards its goal of being one of the first truly digital economies."

Australia-based Gartner analyst Robin Simpson said Hong Kong would be the
first government to implement a multi-purpose, multi-application smart ID
for its population.

"One reason that the Hong Kong SAR project is so significant is that for
the first time, smart card infrastructure will be very widely deployed
across the whole geography to service the entire population," he said.

Mr Simpson said other jurisdictions had wrestled with a dilemma where
citizens would not want smart cards unless they could use them everywhere,
but enterprise would not deploy sufficient infrastructure unless a large
number of people had smart cards.

He said the project was also significant because it was the first time a
government had encouraged private enterprise to take advantage of the smart
card infrastructure by allowing certified third-party applications to be
loaded on to the cards.

The new ID card programme will be formally launched in July, and the cards
will be phased in over four years.

They will store data including a photograph and fingerprints, and can
optionally be used as a digital certificate, driving licence and library
card.

Despite government assurances that the information stored on the cards will
be secure, there have been concerns over forgery or theft.

However, Gartner concludes that the existing ID card system, which was
introduced in 1987, is "outdated and no longer able to meet the growing
needs of the . . . Government".

Mr Wiggins said Hong Kong's small population and mandatory identity card
programme made the adoption of smart cards easier to execute.

He said the HK$3 billion programme cost is only 10 per cent higher than the
cost to replace existing ID cards with a non-smart ID.

Gartner concludes that Hong Kong will be one of the few places where smart
ID cards are embraced in the near future.

In the United States, where the Government is pondering a national ID card
programme in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, there has been
fierce resistance to the idea.

Adding smart functions to the cards will make them even less palatable,
Gartner predicts.

The report said: "National identification cards will face a steep uphill
battle that will impede their deployment and acceptance in the US. Through
2007, US-based identification card deployers will encounter substantial
resistance to adoption that will increase with added functionality."


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Published in the South China Morning Post. Copyright © 2002. All rights
reserved.

-- 
-----------------
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah at ibuc.com>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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