Dutch banks team up on digital identity service pilot

Dutch banks are banding together on a digital identification service which will let online customers use their login details to access other commercial and government sites.

12 comments

Dutch banks team up on digital identity service pilot

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

The banks, through the Dutch Payments Association, are working on a pilot which will go live next year and let participating customers use their online banking identity to access services from the Dutch tax authority and an insurance company. No banking details such as account balance or payment details are exchanged, stresses the Association.

Participants will have to give their express consent to their bank to hand over personal information and each partner organisation may get different information. "So the bank can ask for approval on behalf of one company for the transmission of the name and address of the client and on behalf of another company for a simple age check," says a statement.

The Dutch Payment Association says that ultimately the service will mean consumers will only need to use one identification method, which is both easier to remember and more secure than the current raft of usernames and passwords required by different online providers.

Meanwhile, for merchants, the system means that users do not need to sign up when they first visit a site, boosting conversion rates. In addition, the cost of customer due diligence and credit risk assessment is slashed because of the high level of confidence in using online identities verified by banks.

The banks benefit from being more useful to their customers and the chance to expand their existing identification and authentication services.

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Comments: (12)

Bo Harald Chairman/Founding member, board member at Transmeri, Demos, Real Time Economy Program,MyData

Bravo - this - the most natural thing - has been a great success story in Finland - and later in other Nordics

A Finextra member 

Great news - is this building on the existing and supported QiY platform, business and legal framework?

Vineet Anand Director Business Dev at Company

@Bo - this seems to be a leap forward of PSD2 directive which will have banks create API's for AISP's and PISP's. Digital identity will be an extension similar to Paypal and Barclays accounts as credentials in UK for govt. websites?

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

Why is this any better than using social media login, which is already quite widespread? In the event of loss of money from bank account, will bank indemnify customer or tell customer to go follow up with each and every website into which they logged in via their bank creds?

Bo Harald Chairman/Founding member, board member at Transmeri, Demos, Real Time Economy Program,MyData

Social media credentials cannot be used for bank transactions and in public sector services where similar strong e-id is needed.

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

I wasn't proposing social media login for banking. The moment you allow that government services require stronger ID, you leave yourselves open for different parts of the government to assert the same thing for themselves and disparate e-ID systems are the inevitable result. For example, my government electricity supplier lets me know my bill amount and pay my bill with very weak ID. Whereas my Income Tax Department requires my company to use USB token based digital signature in order to file my corporate tax return. How can these two government entities accept a single e-identity service, whether provided by bank or anybody else? The problem is exacerbated many times over in countries with a federal structure of government where state governments are fairly autonomous e.g. Germany, India, USA.

Bo Harald Chairman/Founding member, board member at Transmeri, Demos, Real Time Economy Program,MyData

Banks have done 3rd party e-id since the 90s - no problem for governments. Federal or not. All the way to municipalities. And of course for similar needs in the private sector. And not only e-id - also signing contracts etc. In private and employee roles.

 

Roger Storm Chief Executive Officer at Euroclear Sweden

Indeed, as BH says eIDs were for example rolled out in Sweden in 2002-03 and have been instrumental to the success for various forms of electronic agreement conclusions. It's been key to dititalized processes in many areas and on many levels: for tax reporting, VAT-reporting, banking services, car registrations, insurance. The technology and know-how and good examples are out there. Great to see the Netherlands joining this, and this is key also to for example instant payments services ... but there ought to be more countries?

A Finextra member 

This is indeed a very good development where banks can leverage some of their main assest, their customer database, their secure infrastructure and their channels. It will be interesting to see what else is possible with this combination of public and private cooperation

Bo Harald Chairman/Founding member, board member at Transmeri, Demos, Real Time Economy Program,MyData

I can think of a big number of things that can be done - in a secure and very userfriendly way (learn once - use everywhere = economy of repetition, economy of reuse, economy of trust - even economy of scale and scope...... all the huge levers in place). Things to do in 3rd party services or from e-bank services directly with single sign-on! :1. signing contracts (also at work - you do use many personal tools anyway...), 2. empowering others, 3. e-wills, 4. voting, 5. sending invitations (using e-invoicing addresses), 6. accepting proposals (mobile press A for paying e-invoice on due date happens in strongly authtenticated space!!  etc

 

Bo Harald Chairman/Founding member, board member at Transmeri, Demos, Real Time Economy Program,MyData

More from Finland:  https://www.finextra.com/blogs/fullblog.aspx?blogid=11447

Bo Harald Chairman/Founding member, board member at Transmeri, Demos, Real Time Economy Program,MyData

Might as well copy-paste text: 

e-banking customers in Finland used their e-banking passwords 56,2 million times to log in to public sector and other non-banking services last year.  Up from 47,1m.

Finland is a small country - so it may be useful to multiply into a corresponding EU-potential = 4 billion times. 

Does this save tax payers' money? Does it save citizens nerves? Oh yeah.. Is it secure? Naturally - it has to be - otherwise banking would not function. Other countries are followin suite - but it could happen faster.

Why not? Do banks not see this as their responsibility (and modest business case). Do politicians not take their responsibility - making it easy and cost-efficient?

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