The mobile solution enables organisations to confirm identity and credentials without collecting or storing an individual’s personal data
IDEMIA, a provider in Augmented Identity, announced a collaboration with Microsoft Azure to deliver Active Directory (Azure AD) verifiable credentials identity solution. Azure AD verifiable credentials enable organisations to confirm information about individuals, such as their education, professional or citizenship certifications, without collecting or storing their personal data.
Verifiable credentials can replace all kinds of hard-copy identity credentials such as physical badges, loyalty cards, and government-issued paper documents. This digital representation of identity or credential allows individuals to take full ownership over that personal information, which is stored on a digital wallet and accessed with a mobile device.
Within verifiable credentials, IDEMIA’s identity verification tools match the data against the system of records to provide authoritative proof of identity for an individual. Because the digital information is verified by IDEMIA, the individual is protected by layers of security, and verification will take only minutes instead of days or weeks. IDEMIA is launching the service in the US with plans to expand to other markets.
‘Mobile ID solutions such as Verifiable Credentials are the single most important security innovation since locking your front door’, Matt Thompson, senior vice president, Civil Identity, at IDEMIA North America. ‘This technology that Microsoft is now supporting in Azure Active Directory increases access to personal information while improving the security of their identity against theft, making it easier and faster for governments and organisations to verify identities and credentials.’
Sue Bohn, Partner Director Program Management, Identity Division at Microsoft Corp. said, ‘Verifiable credentials will revolutionise the way we grant access to information. Organisations will be able to verify identity information quickly with solutions like IDEMIA, while individuals will be able to own and control their credentials.’
Verifiable credentials are based on an open standard developed in the world wide web consortium (W3C) known as Verifiable Credentials Data Model 1.0. A verifiable credential that is represented as a JSON Web Token (JWT) has an expected structure. This standard makes it easy for credentials to be ‘portable’ across organisational boundaries.
For example, a credential issued by a university can be verified by any employer, bank, or any other organisation that accepts the same verifiable credential standard.