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digidental · 2 years ago
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Beyond the immediate results lies the magic of organic growth. Sustainable, genuine, and highly impactful, the world of Dental SEO with Digi Dental is about building a legacy that stands the test of time.
Let's cultivate a digital presence that grows, evolves, and shines. 🌱🌟 Call us on ☎ 0415 188 959
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blockchainfeed · 7 months ago
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While Keyless and Microblink join Microsoft and Google’s marketplaces, Digidentity finds its way to a UK government supplier list. Keyless joins Microsoft Azure Marketplace Passwordless authentication startup Keyless is now available on the Microsof #Blockchain #Crypto
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zealouschuck · 5 years ago
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Universal Credit All You Need To Know 2020
How to apply , what documents do you need, how to confirm your identity, 
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questlation · 4 years ago
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Digidentity Advanced and Qualified eSignatures now available direct from Adobe https://questlation.com/?p=3617&feed_id=22706
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privacyandtechnology · 8 years ago
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By: Jelte Fennema and Peter Boers
Abstract:
This paper sets out to investigate the implementation of Idensys by the Dutch identity broker Digidentity. Our findings indicate that there are a number of serious and less serious implementation errors which lead to the possibility that an account with level EH3 can be hijacked by a third party, without the knowledge of the owner of the account. In this paper we prove that by only knowing the email address of a user we are able to gain access to their Digidentity account by using brute force techniques. Secondly we identify a number of issues in the Android application which pose a risk on rooted devices. In this scenario we are able to extract encrypted information and brute force the PIN number which unlocks the private key of the user. Finally we discuss the ramifications of these findings and propose a number of solutions to the encountered problems to help increase the security of Dutch online identity services.
Read more: full text in PDF
Via: Tweakers
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mailinvest · 4 years ago
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UK's Authorities Digital Service extends contracts with Put up Workplace and Digidentity for wobbly Confirm ID system • The Register
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digidental · 2 years ago
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SEO Process for Dentists (Step 3): Strategy Development 🦷💡 Design a Tailored Dental SEO Plan for Success 🚀
Outrank Competitors and Drive Patient Growth! Call Now for more details ☎ 0415 188 959
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thealphareporter · 5 years ago
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BioID liveness detection automates Digidentity’s identity proofing for British government service GOV.UK Verify
http://dlvr.it/RYsLKk
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trinitydigest · 5 years ago
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BioID liveness detection automates Digidentity’s identity proofing for British government service GOV.UK Verify
http://dlvr.it/RYsL5c
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newsheadlinesnow · 5 years ago
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BioID liveness detection automates Digidentity’s identity proofing for British government service GOV.UK Verify
http://dlvr.it/RYsL0m
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conversationpoint · 5 years ago
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BioID liveness detection automates Digidentity’s identity proofing for British government service GOV.UK Verify
http://dlvr.it/RYry0C
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hopetribune · 5 years ago
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BioID liveness detection automates Digidentity’s identity proofing for British government service GOV.UK Verify
http://dlvr.it/RYrxVN
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universalnewspoint · 5 years ago
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BioID liveness detection automates Digidentity’s identity proofing for British government service GOV.UK Verify
http://dlvr.it/RYrxTH
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p-h-y-g-i-t-a-l · 5 years ago
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05//05//20 OWN RESEARCH PAPER - MULTIPLICITIES
“This chapter explores our physical relationship with our digital extension of selves, highlighting my personal bias towards the rise of digital design, ending with how we should take care when defining what is the reality of self. Online platforms have enabled us to create multiple versions of ourselves and store them in multiple places. Organisations such as The Fabricant are already suggesting what this can look like, with their new digital fashion playground Leela (see Fig. 5), released in April 2020. Leela allows you to “express your digidentity. Introducing the first digital collectables for you to purchase and experience”, with the aim to reduce physical fashion consumption (The Fabricant, 2020). Upon participating in a trial run of the platform in December 2019 - which included a 3D body scan digitally dressed and placed onto a prototype platform - their most common question for feedback participants was the physical-digital relationship between human and scanned avatar. Or their ‘digital twin’, meaning a  “virtual copy of a physical system”,  this term has been around some time, coined back in 2002 by Dr. Micheal Grieves and first used in NASA space missions (Kienzler, 2019). As an identical myself and digital user, I find myself more open to the idea of multiple and digital identities, and research shows that “twins equally recognize their own face and their twin’s face” (Martini, Bufalari, Stazi and Aglioti, 2015). Deducing that one can relate to another, if it is similar enough, as the Fabricant’s 3D body scan was.”
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bestadviceuk · 5 years ago
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Smartr365 and Digidentity to provide digital identity service for remortgaging
Smartr365 and Digidentity have announced that brokers who use Smartr365 will be able to offer digital remortgage deed signing to their clients.
They claim that borrowers will be able to complete the process in as little as three days, 18 fewer than for a paper transaction.
As the Identity solution behind GOV.UK Verify, Digidentity is the only organisation with the requisite certification and…
View On WordPress
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hiregdpr · 7 years ago
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News analysis: GOV.UK Verify goes commercial in fresh attempt at take-off
“The importance of identity and trust is a central concern in the digital market. Organisations need to collaborate to solve the challenges because the digital environment is not yet fully trusted. Identity is fundamental to society.” That is what David Rennie, head of industry engagement for the Cabinet Office’s GOV.UK Verify service, told the DataIQ Summit in 2015. It was early in the launch programme for a bold new digital identity service which would see users of government digital services register once and then reuse the same token from then on. To give the programme more depth – and a future beyond the public sector – seven commercial organisations were brought in to develop the standards and services which would be wrapped in. If that was the bold vision, a written statement given by Oliver Dowden, minister for the implementation of GOV.UK Verify, on 9th October sounded a different note. While talking up the UK as a global leader in secure digital identity and its role as a critical enabler for the Government’s digital transformation, he also noted “challenges” and announced that, “this is therefore the last investment that the Government will provide to directly support the GOV.UK Verify programme.”
Government continues to be a customer – but perhaps the only one.
Instead, it is being transitioned into a private sector-led model with contracts having been signed with several providers for 18 months with capped expenditure.. According to Dowden, “the Government expects that commercial organisations will create and reuse digital identities, and accelerate the creation of an interoperable digital identity market.” The government will continue to be a customer for these services – crucially, perhaps the only one. Of the seven original providers, Royal Mail and CitizenSafe have both stopped accepting any new accounts, suggesting they see little future beyond enabling tax payers to log in to HMRC with relatively little friction. Getting to that point for users has been anything but frictionless, however. Mass adoption has not happened and only 40% of those who set out to create a digital identity actually complete the process. While HMRC spent one year promoting the benefit, little else has been done to push GOV.UK Verify and internal differences between the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and Government Digital Services have seen the programme nearly collapse on more than one occasion. So will the remaining five players stay the distance? According to a spokesperson for the Post Office: “As the market-leading provider of Verify, we are delighted to continue delivering the service to the Government. We are also exploring a number of other opportunities, including those in the private sector, that will accelerate the adoption of Verify while ensuring convenience and security for its users.” “We believe a Government-backed, standards-based identity framework is a great foundation to support the growth of the UK’s digital economy and Post Office is pleased to be playing a role in further helping to establish the UK as a global leader in digital identity,” it confirmed. An Experian spokesperson said: “We remain fully committed to our contractual obligations associated with the service and we have recently signed another extension to supply ID services under Verify to HMG.”
“Turning Verify over to the private sector is not an admission of failure.”
Other providers were less forthcoming with Barclays and Digidentity failing to respond to requests from DataIQ and SecureIdentity offering no comment. In this perspective, the expansion of Verify into the commercial realm may not not accelerate in the way Dowden anticipates. But Frank Joshi, director at Mvine which is a Hub Service Provider to GDS, has a different view. “Government proactively turning Verify over to the private sector is not an admission of failure, but a clear signal that it recognises what most of us already know: the private sector is able to deliver technological innovation at a pace and a quality that is now needed. Privacy campaigners have nothing to fear. The private sector is able to assure no back-doors exist in any of the technical and functional components which make up the sub-system.” He recognises the hard road which the original seven providers have trodden, pinning most of the blame on “vacillation and opacity within central Government which almost kyboshed the entire scheme on more than one occasion.” He argues that the private sector can drive sign-up rates while bringing down the cost per citizen identity as economies of scale kick in. “it should come as no surprise that Government wants to offload the capital cost of the infrastructure to the private sector. But it can only do that if it allows the private sector to arrange itself the way it needs to work – open competition guided by market rules and Government-assured framework,” said Joshi. There are major brands still on board with Verify who have a clear interest in extending the service into new areas, not least the expanding eco-systems of digital platforms where multiple log-ins are a barrier to frictionless customer experience and trust in the security of personal data is low. This might not yet be the rebirth envisaged by the announcement, but it is not quite the death of Verify either.
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