Friday 20 May 2016

Furtive

The Rt Hon Matt Hancock MP, Minister for the Cabinet Office, gave a speech yesterday to launch the Data Science Ethical Framework. It got off to a wobbly start:
When Alan Turing proposed the Turing Machine and his theory of machine intelligence, he would not have imagined that his early ideas of computing and algorithms would be enhanced and evolved using the quintillions of bytes of data we generate today.
There's no telling what Alan Turing would or would not have imagined.

The speech wobbled on:
Turing’s work on enigma during the war, working with Bill Tutte who remained less recognised, is a piece of history we are all familiar with.
Was the minister about to tell us more about Bill Tutte?

No. He wanted to talk about artificial intelligence putting humans out of work ...
We’ve heard this before - from the Luddites to Keynes to Harold Wilson, history is littered with those predicting the end of work. And history has proved them wrong every time.
 ... at least briefly he wanted to talk about that, but then he moved on from Harold Wilson to himself:
Across government we are working hard to ensure data and data-science techniques are put to good use; improving data quality and security through canonical registers, integrating data into digital services; and using cutting edge data science techniques to improve government policy and services.
The minister recognised that you may be a bit confused about canonical registers and kindly explained that:
Digital transformation has no meaning or real world effect unless it is the driver for business transformation, of changes in culture.
Soon we were back on familiar territory:
The [Digital Economy] Bill will allow more modern use of data, to improve services or tackle fraud. And it will do this within a strong framework of data protection and protection of personal information ... It is vital we seize the opportunities that data science presents. The biggest risk would be to do nothing and to miss out on the enormous potential to improve the lives of our citizens.
3 November 2015
The Minister for Cabinet Office Matt Hancock spoke about data-driven government at the Open Data Institute (ODI) summit

The digital platforms we’re building, led by the brilliant GDS, will depend on strong data foundations.
We're back to The magic of open data and revolutionising the relationship between the citizen and the state and open data expanding the economy by causing innovation and up-ending the Constitution so that personal information is disclosed by default while somehow respecting our privacy.

The minister was about three-quarters of the way through his speech now, he's said all this before, the benefits of open data remain dubious, the threats to our privacy are substantial and in his peroration the minister tried to reassure us that there is a new data science ethical framework in the offing.

There was just one other matter slipped in before the final canter:
Privacy or cyber security are nothing without reliable verification of identity. So I'm delighted to announce that GOV.UK Verify [RIP] has passed its service assessment and will go live next week ... Verify allows secure and straightforward identity checking without the need for an identity database - and underpins the digital transformation of government ...
GOV.UK Verify (RIP) has passed its service assessment? Janet Hughes is the Programme Director of GOV.UK Verify (RIP). And she's the "lead assessor for Digital by Default Service Standard Assessments". And she's on the executive management committee of the Government Digital Service, GDS, the only begetters of GOV.UK Verify (RIP).

But no time to ask about that and no time to ask how reliable, secure and straightforward GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is because, immediately, the minister was back to:
Technology is constantly changing, new techniques constantly invented. These offer huge opportunities to improve lives, to create jobs, to connect better the citizens and the state. We must be at the forefront of this change, secure yet ambitious, else we will count the cost.
We have asked before which senior figures in government would be prepared to put their name to the declaration that GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is "live". Now we know. Poor Rt Hon Matt Hancock MP, Minister for the Cabinet Office.

Furtive

The Rt Hon Matt Hancock MP, Minister for the Cabinet Office, gave a speech yesterday to launch the Data Science Ethical Framework. It got off to a wobbly start:
When Alan Turing proposed the Turing Machine and his theory of machine intelligence, he would not have imagined that his early ideas of computing and algorithms would be enhanced and evolved using the quintillions of bytes of data we generate today.
There's no telling what Alan Turing would or would not have imagined.

Wednesday 18 May 2016

RIP IDA – worse than you thought

No need to say it, it goes without saying, it should be obvious to all but,
just in case it isn't obvious to all,
IDA is dead.

IDA, now known as "GOV.UK Verify (RIP)",
is the Cabinet Office Identity Assurance programme.

The problem you already knew about ...
The point of GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is to assure central government departments like HMRC, Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, that the person on the other end of the line is who they say they are. GOV.UK Verify (RIP) follows the good practice, we are told, set out in GPG45, Good Practice Guide 45.

Chapter 4 of GPG45, p.9, provides for four levels of assurance, 1-4.

Level 1 isn't much use to a relying party such as HMRC, the identity hasn't been proved at all.

Level 2 gets a bit more useful: "The steps taken to determine that the identity relates to a real person and that the Applicant is [the] owner of that identity might be offered in support of civil proceedings". Level 2 might support identification in a civil court. It might. It might not.

Levels 3 and 4 are successively more reliable. But that's irrelevant at the moment as GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is only offering Level 2.

What's more, it's having trouble reaching even Level 2 according to OIX, the Open Identity Exchange, the Government Digital Service's business partner. If GOV.UK Verify (RIP) could use our personal bank account information, OIX say, that "would help [to] achieve the required standards against the 5 elements of identity assurance at level of assurance 2" (p.11).

To some extent, OIX have now got their wish. GDS tell us that: "In the last few months, we've seen new data sources and methods being introduced, and we've worked with mobile network operators as they've developed a new phone contract validation service that’s now in live use in GOV.UK Verify [RIP] ... It’s also now possible to verify your identity without either a passport or driving licence, thanks to a new method introduced by one of our certified companies which allows you to use your bank account as proof of your identity".

They've got their additional data and it's not helping. The GOV.UK Verify (RIP) account creation success rate remains stuck at around 70%. Young people have trouble opening an account, so do old people and unemployed people and people on low incomes.

Hat tip someone, it's all a far cry from the 16 September 2014 GOV.UK Verify (RIP) service assessment, when the assessors' report called for GDS to "actively work with the market to grow [demographic] coverage to as close to 100% as can be achieved, as early as possible during the Beta".

... may be worse than you thought
But suppose GOV.UK Verify (RIP) achieved 100% demographic coverage and enrolled everyone into GOV.UK Verify (RIP) with a level of assurance of 2. Then what?

Enter NIST, the US National Institute of Standards and Technology. They've come up with a draft of some new so-called "800-63" guidance about how to do the identity verification job.

They're a thorough lot, NIST. They look at GDS's "level of assurance" and they see not one thing but three things:
A new approach for digital authentication solutions is required by these guidelines, separating the individual elements of identity assurance into discrete, component parts. For non-federated systems, agencies will select and combine two (2) individual components, referred to as Identity Assurance Level (IAL) and Authenticator Assurance Level (AAL). For federated systems, a third component, Federation Assurance Level (FAL), is required.
  • IAL refers to the robustness of the identity proofing process and the binding between an authenticator and a specific individual.
  • AAL refers to the robustness of the authentication process itself.
  • FAL refers to the robustness of the federation assertion protocol utilized to communicate authentication and attribute information (if applicable) to a relying party.
GDS's level of assurance has four possible values, as noted, from 1 to 4. NIST's IAL has only three values, 1 to 3. An IAL of 1 is self-assertion, as with GDS, and is useless to a relying party. 2 is better and 3 is best, requiring attendance in person by the applicant and verification by a trained operative.

NIST compare this new suggestion of theirs with several other identity verification standards, including GDS's GPG45, and they summarise their thoughts in this table (para.2.4):

SP 800-63 [GPG45] [RSDOPS] STORK 2.0 29115:2011 ISO 29003 Government
of Canada
N/A N/A Level 01 N/A N/A N/A N/A
AAL/IAL 1 Level 1 Level 1 QAA Level 1 LoA 1 LoA 1 IAL/CAL 1
AAL/IAL 1 Level 2 Level 2 QAA Level 2 LoA 2 LoA 2 IAL/CAL 2
AAL/IAL 2 Level 3 Level 3 QAA Level 3 LoA 3 LoA 3 IAL/CAL 3
AAL/IAL 3 Level 4 N/A2 QAA Level 4 LoA 4 LoA 4 IAL/CAL 4

As far as NIST are concerned, GDS's level of assurance 2 is no better than 1.

They both map to a NIST IAL of 1. Self-assertion.

GOV.UK Verify (RIP) could achieve 100% demographic coverage at level of assurance 2 and, in NIST's view, still not have anything useful for HMRC to rely on.

----------

Updated 3.6.16

GOV.UK Verify (RIP) uses your name, address, date of birth and, optionally, your sex to try to verify your identity on-line, together with your passport details, your driving licence details and your credit history. We know, see above, that GOV.UK Verify (RIP) can also use your mobile phone contract and/or your bank account.

Who gave your mobile phone network operator permission to share your data with the Government Digital Service (GDS)? Very possibly, no-one. Who gave your bank permission to share your data with GDS? Very possibly, ditto.

Desperate to try to raise the reliability of GOV.UK Verify (RIP) off the floor and above the level of self-certification, GDS look as though they're taking a few ethical short cuts, the latest of which involves grabbing your charitable donation history, please see JustGiving and GOV.UK Verify [RIP]: Exploring JustGiving information as part of the GOV.UK Verify [RIP] process (pp.3-4):
The first hypothesis explored the response of JustGiving users if information about their activity on JustGiving was used by a GOV.UK Verify [RIP] Certified Company as part of the verification process ...
"No holds barred", as the referee used to say, GDS look as though they're prepared to try to wrestle all our personal information out of us even if they are incapable of performing on-line identity verification.


Updated 9.12.16

On Monday morning this week GDS published Future-proofing our approach to identity verification. That's a blog post about GOV.UK Verify (RIP).

Read the title quickly and you may be tempted to believe that the authors describe how GDS have future-proofed identity verification. That's not what it says. It's the approach to identity verification that has allegedly been future-proofed.

There's no telling what that means. But read the blog post in full, and it's clear that nothing has been future-proofed. GDS hope that OIX, their business partner, might be able to find some way to establish a reliable link between a GOV.UK Verify (RIP) identity and a person.

The approach to identity verification favoured by GDS is knowledge-based: "Knowledge based verification (KBV) involves asking the user a range of questions only they would know the answer to". That can't be right, can it. If only the user knows the answer, then GOV.UK Verify (RIP) can't tell whether the answer is right.

"There are further innovative data sources and methods currently being explored in the private sector that would be both secure and convenient for GOV.UK Verify [RIP] users". Such as? What further innovative data sources and methods? GDS don't tell us.

That's because they don't know. They don't know how to improve KBV. Instead, they're asking OIX to ask the market if they know: "We are inviting the market to submit a proposal to help us explore what alternative, additional or complementary data sources are being used in the market for KBVs".

They haven't future-proofed anything. They've issued an invitation. An invitation to submit a proposal. A proposal to help GDS explore. Explore an alternative data source or an additional one (what's the difference here between "alternative" and "additional") or a complementary one.

That flabby invitation is GDS's response to the failure of GOV.UK Verify (RIP) to rise above the level of self-certification.

To the extent that Kevin Cunnington's strategy for GDS depends on the success of GOV.UK Verify (RIP), the strategy's had it. Mr Cunnington is the director general of GDS and he's promised the public a strategy before Christmas. 15 days to go. Good luck with that.

RIP IDA – worse than you thought

No need to say it, it goes without saying, it should be obvious to all but,
just in case it isn't obvious to all,
IDA is dead.

IDA, now known as "GOV.UK Verify (RIP)",
is the Cabinet Office Identity Assurance programme.

The problem you already knew about ...
The point of GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is to assure central government departments like HMRC, Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, that the person on the other end of the line is who they say they are. GOV.UK Verify (RIP) follows the good practice, we are told, set out in GPG45, Good Practice Guide 45.

Chapter 4 of GPG45, p.9, provides for four levels of assurance, 1-4.

Level 1 isn't much use to a relying party such as HMRC, the identity hasn't been proved at all.

Level 2 gets a bit more useful: "The steps taken to determine that the identity relates to a real person and that the Applicant is [the] owner of that identity might be offered in support of civil proceedings". Level 2 might support identification in a civil court. It might. It might not.

Levels 3 and 4 are successively more reliable. But that's irrelevant at the moment as GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is only offering Level 2.

What's more, it's having trouble reaching even Level 2 according to OIX, the Open Identity Exchange, the Government Digital Service's business partner. If GOV.UK Verify (RIP) could use our personal bank account information, OIX say, that "would help [to] achieve the required standards against the 5 elements of identity assurance at level of assurance 2" (p.11).

To some extent, OIX have now got their wish. GDS tell us that: "In the last few months, we've seen new data sources and methods being introduced, and we've worked with mobile network operators as they've developed a new phone contract validation service that’s now in live use in GOV.UK Verify [RIP] ... It’s also now possible to verify your identity without either a passport or driving licence, thanks to a new method introduced by one of our certified companies which allows you to use your bank account as proof of your identity".

They've got their additional data and it's not helping. The GOV.UK Verify (RIP) account creation success rate remains stuck at around 70%. Young people have trouble opening an account, so do old people and unemployed people and people on low incomes.

Hat tip someone, it's all a far cry from the 16 September 2014 GOV.UK Verify (RIP) service assessment, when the assessors' report called for GDS to "actively work with the market to grow [demographic] coverage to as close to 100% as can be achieved, as early as possible during the Beta".

... may be worse than you thought
But suppose GOV.UK Verify (RIP) achieved 100% demographic coverage and enrolled everyone into GOV.UK Verify (RIP) with a level of assurance of 2. Then what?

Saturday 14 May 2016

Mind the gap

On the London Underground/Metro/Subway a recorded message tells us all, over the public address system, to "mind the gap". That's the gap between the train and the platform, of course, which we are all supposed to be too stupid to mind unless we're reminded.

There once was a post-nuclear holocaust film the name of which entirely escapes DMossEsq in which empty trains continued to travel the tube system following their programmed timetable, stopping to open their doors at each appointed station and the only voice heard was the PA system mindlessly repeating "mind the gap".

-----  o  O  o  -----

There's a Twitter account called "GreatUKGovTweets". Its icon is a crown. Who knows but perhaps it's an official UK government account?


Day in, day out, @UKGovTweets promotes the best tweets emitted by members of the administration. It's an automated flattery service. It saves human bootlickers the effort of doing the job themselves.

Here are some examples:


"Congratulations on writing a great UK Gov tweet"?

They're not all that great really, are they. By "great", the robot Twitter account probably means that there has been lots of "engagement". Which isn't what any human means by "great".

That's one problem with this dim form of artificial intelligence.

The other problem is that Mike Bracken hasn't worked for the government since 30 September 2015. However great they may be, his tweets shouldn't be included in the GreatUKGovTweets universe. They are not instances of "UK government communication".

But the robot hasn't been updated. It's still saying "mind the gap" even though there's no-one left any more to mind the gap.

-----  o  O  o  -----

There's a little parable for you. If, like the Government Digital Service, whose executive director Mike Bracken once was, you believe in digital by default and government by the internet and you find the notion of human intervention in public services anathema, then a gap will instantly open up between the digital records and reality. The computerised services will become instantly useless.

Mind the gap.

----------

Updated 1.10.16

It's a year since Mr Bracken left Whitehall.

It's 4½ months since the post above was published. Since then Mr Bracken has been congratulated 22 times for "writing a great UK gov tweet". That's 22 more artificial intelligence mistakes.

The real UK government should step in and stop this Twitter account's nonsense.


Updated 22.5.17

25 times @UKGovTweets has congratulated Mr Bracken since 1 October 2016 for "writing a great UK gov tweet" ...

... despite the fact that he doesn't work for the UK government.

Not only that but @UKGovTweets is not the UK government. It is Measured Voice.

Or at least it was but now: "Measured Voice is no longer in service ... Please contact info <at> measuredvoice.com if you need further assistance. — The Team".

Mind the gap

On the London Underground/Metro/Subway a recorded message tells us all, over the public address system, to "mind the gap". That's the gap between the train and the platform, of course, which we are all supposed to be too stupid to mind unless we're reminded.

There once was a post-nuclear holocaust film the name of which entirely escapes DMossEsq in which empty trains continued to travel the tube system following their programmed timetable, stopping to open their doors at each appointed station and the only voice heard was the PA system mindlessly repeating "mind the gap".

Wednesday 4 May 2016

RIP IDA – the last rites

No need to say it, it goes without saying, it should be obvious to all but,
just in case it isn't obvious to all,
IDA is dead.

IDA, now known as "GOV.UK Verify (RIP)",
is the Cabinet Office Identity Assurance programme.


We can make a meal of it. Or we can do it the quick way.

Let's try the quick way first. Three steps.

Step one
The Government Digital Service (GDS) have published their ten design principles. These are treated with reverence. No deviation is allowed. Here's the first principle, the most important, the oldest rule in the book:


Step 2
GOV.UK Verify (RIP) was meant to go live last month, April 2016. The system has been in development for four years and it's been in test mode for two years. As late as 26 April 2016 the public were led to believe that GOV.UK Verify (RIP) was "on track" to go live on 29 April 2016.

Three days later, on 29 April 2016, GDS published an embarrassing "update" claiming that they were "nearly there". That is their way of acknowledging that they're still not there, and that GOV.UK Verify (RIP), like many "agile" systems, is in eternal test mode and will never be live.

Sir Jeremy Heywood, the Cabinet Secretary, one of the most powerful people in the country, took it upon himself yesterday to explain on Twitter that GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is "hugely important" for the government ...

Step 3
... and there we have it – GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is a government need and not a user need.

There has been no public outcry about the failure of GOV.UK Verify (RIP). The public in the main have never heard of GOV.UK Verify (RIP), we don't want it and we don't need it. Alive or dead, GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is of no popular interest.

The only people interested are the government. I.e. the administration. That is, GDS and Sir Jeremy. GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is their need. At least they think it is but, be patronising, "have empathy ... remember that what they ask for isn't always what they need".

GOV.UK Verify (RIP) breaks the most revered rule in the book. It was a ghastly mistake in the first place and its predictable passing should be celebrated. RIP.

RIP IDA – the last rites

No need to say it, it goes without saying, it should be obvious to all but,
just in case it isn't obvious to all,
IDA is dead.

IDA, now known as "GOV.UK Verify (RIP)",
is the Cabinet Office Identity Assurance programme.


We can make a meal of it. Or we can do it the quick way.

Let's try the quick way first. Three steps.

Tuesday 26 April 2016

RIP IDA – are GDS talking to themselves?

No need to say it, it goes without saying, it should be obvious to all but,
just in case it isn't obvious to all,
IDA is dead.

IDA, now known as "GOV.UK Verify (RIP)",
is the Cabinet Office Identity Assurance programme.

Every week, the Government Digital Service (GDS) publish statistics about GOV.UK Verify (RIP) on their performance platform. A degree of academic rigour is called for. Without that, GDS are just talking to themselves.

As we speak, some of these statistics are complete to the week 11-17 April 2016 while others include the week 18-24 April 2016. We ignore the latter in the paragraphs below.

1. Total authentications
We ignore the 185,149 basic accounts. These are unverified and have no place in a verified identity assurance system.

User sign-ins went up from 547,416 to 571,191, i.e. there were 23,775 of them during the week.The number of verified accounts went up by 7,509 from 487,267 to 494,776.

Adding the two together – which is GDS's peculiar way – tells us that total authentications went up by 31,284.

2. Authentications per week
Nothing to add.

3. Authentication completion rate
43% for sign-ins and account creations added together. Given that there were 31,284 completed/successful authentications (see 1. above), if that's 43% of all attempted authentications, there must have been 72,753 authentication attempts in all, of which 41,469 failed.

4. Authentication success rate
90% – no idea what this means.

5. Account creation success rate, all services
71%. Given that 7,509 verified accounts were created (see 1. above), if that's 71%, then there must have been 10,576 account creation attempts altogether, of which 3,067 failed.

If GDS intend to enrol 50 million people, say, into GOV.UK Verify (RIP), at the rate of 7,509 per week the job will take 6,659 weeks or 128 years.

It could be worse than that. Those 7,509 verified accounts could be 939 people each creating one account with each of the eight "identity providers". On that basis, 50 million people would need 400 million accounts which could take 1,024 years to create.

Most people die before they're 128, let alone 1,024, which implies that GOV.UK Verify (RIP)'s registration job can never be completed.

The advocates of biometrics look for a failure-to-enrol rate (FTE) of less than 1%. Anything higher casts doubt on the credibility of proceeding with that biometric. GOV.UK Verify (RIP)'s FTE of 29% makes the feasibility of the system problematic.

Given that a total of 41,469 attempted authentications failed (see 3 above) and that 3,067 of them were attempted account creations, the other 38,402 must have been failed sign-ins.

Given that there were 72,753 authentication attempts (see 3. above) and that 10,576 of them were attempted account creations, there must have been 62,177 attempted sign-ins.

38,402 failures out of 62,177 attempts indicates a 62% false reject rate (FRR). 62% of the time, people are being told that they are not themselves.

That is similar to the FRR for face recognition any time more than six months after the enrolment photograph is inscribed on the register. Face recognition is useless as a biometric. GOV.UK Verify (RIP) looks similarly useless if its FRR really is 62%.

You can reduce the FRR, of course, by making it easier to achieve a match. But that has the effect of increasing the false accept rate (FAR), i.e. it becomes easier for a person to pretend that they're someone else, which is the opposite of GOV.UK Verify (RIP)'s objective.

6. Sign-in success rate
99% – no idea what this means.

7. User satisfaction – verification, security, certified company
No data available for the week 11-17 April 2016.

8. Certified company completion rate
55% – no idea what this means. Compare 43%, see 3. above?

-----  o  O  o  -----

4., 6. and 8. above may mean something to GDS but they're talking to themselves – these statistics can mean nothing to anyone else. At 7. above GDS have stopped talking even to themselves.

1., 2., 3. and 5. above broadcast GDS's message loud and clear to anyone listening – GOV.UK Verify (RIP) is a dead duck.

GDS nevertheless plan to announce some time this week that the duck is alive. In their world, perhaps it is. But not here on Terror Firmer, it isn't.

----------

Updated: 11:00

At 29%, GOV.UK Verify (RIP)'s failure-to-enrol rate (FTE) is problematic, as noted at 5. above.

GDS are doing what they can to reduce it:
  • They have increased the recommended minimum age of people trying to register for an on-line account from 19 to 20. That may reduce the number of GOV.UK Verify (RIP) failures. But at the same time it would cut out 1.2% of the population and thereby reduce the universality of GDS's identity assurance scheme, making it less use to government and less attractive to the private sector, who are being courted by GDS.
  • They have also taken to steering people away from the "identity providers" who are less likely to be able to complete enrolment. Again, that may reduce the number of GOV.UK Verify (RIP) failures. But it would do so at the expense of reducing the number and variety of enrolment agents/"identity providers"/"certified companies" when GDS's sales pitch to the populace is precisely that there is a wide and high quality choice on offer.
The other action GDS could take is to change the enrolment process. At the moment, the identity of a given name, address and age with sex optional is verified by reference to passport details, driving licence details and credit history. The enrolment process could be changed to take into account further personal information.

What further personal information?

Candidates include your health records, education records, travel records, bank account transactions, insurance policies, mobile phone usage, email contact lists, social media accounts, ... GDS claimed 18 months ago that they were about to announce their choice of additional personal information to include in the GOV.UK Verify (RIP) enrolment process. They still haven't.

Most people are not often exercised by questions of privacy but GDS's demand for yet more personal information might tip the balance.

Despite GDS's claims to the contrary, we have little or no proven control over these personal details once they have been divulged.

The privacy and fraud risks seem exorbitant compared with the benefit of being able to use GOV.UK Verify (RIP) to view our driving licence details on-line.

It seems unnecessary to amplify those risks when we already have the Government Gateway as a long-established working alternative to GOV.UK Verify (RIP).

Unnecessary also when, according to GDS, no other country has adopted this approach, the UK is in the vanguard.

In the absence of any additional personal information being added to the GOV.UK Verify (RIP) enrolment process we are left with GDS's eight "identity providers".

Five of them are being branded useless – Barclays, CitizenSafe/GB Group, the Royal Mail, Safran Morpho/SecureIdentity and Verizon. That must sour relations between them and GDS and it might sour relations between them and the three favoured "identity providers" – Digidentity, Experian and the Post Office.


The position of Barclays is odd. You'd think they would be among the best enrolment agents. Whatever percentage of applicants they can shepherd through the registration process should be definitive. Far from consigning Barclays to the out-of-favour list, perhaps GDS should be checking the apparently outperforming Digidentity, Experian and the Post Office to make sure that they aren't relaxing the matching criteria and exacerbating the FAR problem (false accept rate).

With only three favoured "identity providers", GDS are exposed. The Post Office is not a "certified company", its application for approval lapsed well over a year ago. And Digidentity and the Post Office are linked. If one of them suffers a security problem, they would both be knocked out, leaving GOV.UK Verify (RIP) with just one "identity provider" – Experian.

This visible promotion of Experian into the UK Constitution as the "identity provider" of choice for the entire nation has not been even debated by Parliament, let alone agreed. In this matter, GDS are wildly out of their depth and ultra vires. They need to talk to a lot more people about it than just themselves.


Updated 3.5.16

A new metric has been added to the GOV.UK Verify (RIP) dashboard:

9. Certified company choice
It's 81%.

GDS continue to recommend against registering with Barclays, GB Group/CitizenSafe, the Royal Mail, Safran Morpho/SecureIdentity and Verizon.

User satisfaction, please see 7. above, remains a thing of the past. It is measured in three ways and none of the figures have been updated since 27 March 2016.


Updated 11.11.16

GDS don't always talk to themselves about the performance of GOV.UK Verify (RIP). Two days ago they sent Chris Skidmore MP off to talk to Korea about it. In his speech, he said:
GOV.UK Verify [RIP] allows the citizen to create a single online identity to access a growing number of government services. And since going live in May, GOV.UK Verify [RIP] has verified more than 900,000 users.
Take a quick peak peek at the GOV.UK Verify (RIP) dashboard on the GOV.UK performance platform. On 1 May 2016 there were 692,951 GOV.UK Verify (RIP) accounts. By 6 November 2016, that figure had grown to 911,096.

Mr Skidmore is a historian as well as a politician. He knows to check his sources. But on this occasion he didn't. Since going live in May, GOV.UK Verify (RIP) has verified 218,145 users and not "more than 900,000" of them.

Even its supporters warn about the "wildly unrealistic expectations" of GOV.UK Verify (RIP). Next time he delivers a speech prepared for him by GDS he is advised to check it first.

RIP IDA – are GDS talking to themselves?

No need to say it, it goes without saying, it should be obvious to all but,
just in case it isn't obvious to all,
IDA is dead.

IDA, now known as "GOV.UK Verify (RIP)",
is the Cabinet Office Identity Assurance programme.

Every week, the Government Digital Service (GDS) publish statistics about GOV.UK Verify (RIP) on their performance platform. A degree of academic rigour is called for. Without that, GDS are just talking to themselves.

As we speak, some of these statistics are complete to the week 11-17 April 2016 while others include the week 18-24 April 2016. We ignore the latter in the paragraphs below.