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The Digital Identity Working Group (DIWG), made up of digital identity specialists from eight Digital Government Exchange (DGX) member states across the world, has identified 11 core principles to support international collaboration on the development of mutually recognised and interoperable digital identity systems and infrastructure.

Digital Government Exchange (DGX) 400W

The DIWG lays out principles covering openness and transparency, reusability, user-centricity, inclusion, accessibility and multilingualism, security and privacy, technology neutrality and data portability, administrative simplicity, preservation of information, effectiveness and efficiency in its Digital Identity in Response to Covid-19[1] report.

The 22-page report identifies these principles based on a comparative survey of existing policy, legal and technological frameworks across the current digital ID landscape and of specific digital ID solutions and use cases drawn from the eight countries participating in the DIWG: Australia[2], Canada[3], Finland, Israel, New Zealand, Singapore[4], the Netherlands and the United Kingdom[5].

Interoperability

“Most countries are currently taking a risk-based and phased approach to mutual recognition and interoperability,” the DIWG says.

“The working group recognised the value of a common set of principles to guide mutual recognition and interoperability of digital identities and infrastructure. These would give regard to alignment of policy and legal frameworks, technical interoperability and standards.

“These principles could help to accelerate interoperability and realise potential benefits, including opening international borders for trade and travel in recovery from Covid-19.

“Close attention needs to be considered for data management and the protection of personal information by considering existing internationally recognised principles or guidelines, including to consider privacy, transparency, fairness and person-centred values.

“Other policy and legal frameworks will need to align between countries to enable sustainable interoperability of trust frameworks and digital identity systems, including global digital identity standards, identity assurance levels and liability frameworks.

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