tailieunhanh - The Role of Digital Identity Management in the Internet Economy

Transitory messages are not intended to formalize or perpetuate knowledge and do not set policy, establish guidelines or procedures, certify a transaction, or become a receipt. The retention requirement for transitory messages is "retain until obsolete, superseded or administrative value is lost." Therefore, electronic communications that fall into this category can be disposed of at any time once they are no longer needed. Agencies that allow the use of electronic communications on their networks, including e-mail, instant messaging, text messaging (such as SMS, Blackberry PIN, etc), multimedia messaging (such as MMS), chat messaging, social networking (such as Facebook, Twitter, etc.), or. | OECDpublishing Please cite this paper as OECD 2009 The Role of Digital Identity Management in the Internet Economy A Primer for Policy Makers OECD Digital Economy Papers No. 160 OECD Publishing. http 222134375767 OECD Digital Economy Papers No. 160 The Role of Digital Identity Management in the Internet EconOmy A PRIMER FOR POLICY MAKERS OECD OECD Unclassified DSTI ICCP REG 2008 10 FINAL Organisation de Cooperation et de Développement Économiques Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development 11-Jun-2009 English - Or. English DIRECTORATE FOR SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY AND INDUSTRY COMMITTEE FOR INFORMATION COMPUTER AND COMMUNICATIONS POLICY Unclassified Working Party on Information Security and Privacy THE ROLE OF DIGITAL IDENTITY MANAGEMENT IN THE INTERNET ECONOMY A PRIMER FOR POLICY MAKERS z s-0 M B z s- JT03266499 Document complet disponible sur OLIS dans son format d origine Complete document available on OLIS in its original format DSTI ICCP REG 2008 10 FINAL FOREWORD This primer aims to provide policy makers a broad-brush understanding of the various dimensions of digital identity management IdM . Consistent with the Seoul Ministerial Declaration it also aims to support efforts to address public policy issues for securely managing and protecting digital identities with a view to strengthening confidence in the online activities crucial to the growth of the Internet Economy. The primer is a product of the Working Party on Information Security and Privacy. It is part of a broader work programme on IdM that began with a workshop held in Trondheim Norway in May 2007 sti security-privacy idm . It was prepared by a volunteer group of experts led by Katarina de Brisis of Norway with additional assistance from Nick Mansfield consultant to the Secretariat and Mary Rundle who provided assistance in her capacity as a Research Associate with the Oxford Internet Institute through a project funded by the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation. .

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