Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Know ID Workshop, Part 1: Will Robots Need Passports?
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Will Robots Need Passports?
digital identity in the new world
KnowID
Las Vegas
March 2019
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Hello, AI
My nine year old just asked “Do robots have passports?”
We agreed they’ll need one in the future, probably.
Victoria Richardson, Chief Strategy Officer, AusPayNet.
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On the Internet, no-one knows
you’re a dog
And they still don’t, despite two decades of “digital identity” thinking
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On the Internet, no-one knows
you’re a fridge pretending to be a
dog
This is the progress we’ve made in twenty years of online society
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It’s Getting Worse
Insecurity as pollution. Select All (27th January 2017).
“That your computer can affect the
security of Twitter is a market failure”
”We need to reverse the trend to
connect everything to the internet”
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On the Internet, no-one knows
you’re a Russian-hacked fridge
pretending to be a Swedish bot
pretending to be a Fox News dog
This is where we are going next
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Will Robots Have Passports? Yes.
In fact they will have more than one,
just like the rest of us…
…finance passport, a games
passport, a dating passport, an adult
passport, a work passport
But they won’t have the most
important stamp of all…
IS_A_PERSON
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25/03/201913
Editor's Notes
All the things you are
The number of proposed biometric technologies increases daily. Starting with the well-established fingerprint systems to the more esoteric such as ear geometry (commonly left by listeners at crime scenes in Switzerland, apparently), gait (the way you walk) and body odour. How should you go about deciding the most appropriate technology for any given application?
Biometric technologies are useful means of identifying people against databases or verifying that they are who they say they are. A small number of technologies are good at the former function (e.g. iris and fingerprint) whereas many are capable of verification against a biometric template stored on a token such as a smart card or travel document.
There are many different applications for these two functions within UK government such as:
Verifying that a document holder is the legitimate document holder by matching them against a biometric held within the document.
Preventing duplicate applications for documents by searching against the database of currently issued documents.
Preventing people holding different identities on different systems (e.g. Driving License vs Passport) by sharing and cross-checking biometric data.
Ensuring that only legitimate members of staff have access to secure areas and systems.
The complexity of the individual requirements of each application coupled with the speed of advance of biometric technologies means that there is no single best biometric for all applications.