Levels of identity security

Different Levels of Identity Security

The security features governing the security of an identity can be divided into three levels of security, i.e. Level 1 Security (L1S) (Overt), Level 2 Security (L2S) (Covert) and Level 3 Security (L3S) (Forensic). The three levels of security, in combination, provide comprehensive security coverage for identities and related documents to ensure their validity and authenticity. These are typically used to protect identity information on crucial documents such as identity cards, driving licenses and passports to ensure originality and accuracy of the identities they represent. The diagram below illustrates the different levels of security and how they ensure complete security coverage of an identity.

Security levels

L1S features provide the advantage of easy and quick cursory visual verification of identity information without the use of specific or specialized tools. However, an expert with specific tools will be necessary to identify forgeries or tampering. Due to the basic and visual nature of verification of these features, L1S features alone are no longer secure and can, in some instances where poorly implemented, increase the incidences of identity theft, abuse and document forgery. In addition, because such features and information printed using L1S are static, there are inherent limitations on the depth and validity of the identity information being protected as well as if such information is most up-to-date.
L2S has been breached by technological advancements and can no longer be considered as 100% secure. With today's technology, counterfeiting is no longer unusual and identity document information can be potentially tampered, modified, stolen and duplicated into another document to be used for unauthorised or illegal purposes.
Level 3 Security (L3S) is referred to as the most in-depth and highest security level technology for securing identities and identity documents. This focuses around the protection of the one True Identity of each individual and thereby, automatically protecting the related identity documents (conversely, in L1S and L2S schemas, the focus is to protect an identity document to then be able to protect an identity. However, once the identity document's security is breached, the identity it is meant to protect is also automatically compromised). This type of technology has been endorsed by the United Nation Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the United Nation Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN.GIFT).[1] During the Vienna Forum in 2008,[2] both the UNODC and UN.GIFT have endorsed that machine readable codes are made difficult to falsify by not storing identity information on the document but, instead, in the source database which is centralized, protected and only accessible via relevant access authorisations and authorized tools. In relation to the UNODC Article 12 of the Legislative Guide for the Implementation of the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Tracking in Persons, it stipulates the following:
Several kinds of technology that are new or in the process of being developed offer considerable potential for the creation of new types of document that identify individuals in a unique manner, can be rapidly and accurately read by machines and are difficult to falsify because they rely on information stored in a database out of the reach offenders rather than information provided in the document itself.
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime

NexCode

NexCode is an example of a proven Level 3 Security (L3S) Forensic data technology that is already in use globally. NexCode is developed and patented globally based on the recommendations and mandates by UN.GIFT and UNODC. In particular NexCode addresses concerns of true identity verification, effective and efficient enforcement, and most importantly, data protection via forensic information management and real-time data retrieval from secure remote source databases.

See also

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