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Draft Recommendation on the Governance of Digital Identity

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updated at 21 Mar 2023
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II. 2 Use service design methodologies to ensure that digital identity systems respond to the needs of users and achieve accessible, ethical, and equitable outcomes, particularly by:

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  • Henk Marsman
    Henk Marsman  •  Author  •  2023-03-22 14:27:16

    add: designing the feedback loop to capture the effect and correct where necessary, including easy ways for users to complain, interacting with civic organizations that may point to weak aspects in the solutions, etcetera.

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    • Chris Colenso-Dunne

      1. Attributes may be time or location based, permanent, incapable of voluntary alteration, for example date of birth (DOB), place of birth (POB), biometrical data: blood type; finger & iris prints; face recognition; height; gait; genome; chromosomes; biological sex; ethnicity; skin colour/tone.

      2. Health and biometrical data may be transient but sensitive, eg HIV/AIDS; body mass.

      3. Attributes created by national, state or local governments can be revised, eg passport number, driver licence, social security number, if such data has been stolen to be used to steal the identity of a natural person, their title to realty or non-realty.

      4. Permanent attributes such as DOB, POB, being incapable of revision, if stolen represent considerable chronic risk to a natural person, whose identity may be entirely hijacked by malevolent third parties.

      5. Permanent personal attributes, eg DOB and POB, but not personal names or government attributes, must protected as sensitive personal data

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