Renewed funding for developing trustworthy digital identity in the Global South

Tuesday 11 Jun 2024

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The Alan Turing Institute has announced a renewed grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation today to help countries address requirements needed to achieve secure, private, and trustworthy digital public infrastructure (DPI), enabling residents to access public and private services such as healthcare, education, finance, and social protection.

The project, funded by a $4 million grant over the next three years, aims to build upon the existing efforts of the partnership to establish trustworthy digital infrastructure systems and increase the scope of their work beyond digital identity to include secure and privacy-preserving data exchange, credentialling, and electronic signature mechanisms for paperless and cashless digital economic growth.

The work will focus on five key challenge areas:

  • Uncovering and mitigating of risks and threats facing digital infrastructure systems 
  • Developing trust mechanisms to allow digital ID technologies to facilitate cross-border trade and interoperability 
  • Improvement of methods that enable secure and private sharing of data with user consent and safeguards
  • Increasing knowledge, skills, and suitability of tools to facilitate the design, development, and assessment of trustworthy identity systems
  • Supporting countries to understand, evaluate and mitigate cyber risks in digital systems

During this period, the researchers will launch a Digital Identity Cyber Threats Observatory which will monitor professional media and forums, vulnerability databases and the dark web to identify emerging cyber threats, risks and incidents that are directly relevant, or closely related to the national digital identity community.  

The outputs of this work - led by Professor Carsten Maple, Turing Fellow, and Professor Jon Crowcroft, Special Adviser to the Executive at The Alan Turing Institute - will be disseminated as a digital public good.

Professor Maple said: “We are excited to continue to work with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to deliver trustworthy digital infrastructure that can support the delivery of tangible benefit across the world, but especially to those in low- and middle- income countries that need it most.”

The two organisations have already been collaborating for four years with an investment of $5.1 million to enhance the security and privacy aspects of national scale digital ID infrastructure and address the related privacy and security implications, maximising the benefit of this technology for countries across the globe.

Digital IDs are crucial in an increasingly digital society and every year billions of dollars are being invested to develop more secure, scalable, and user-friendly identity systems.

Many developing countries lack a reliable identification system for their residents, which impacts their ability to access essential services like healthcare, education, finance, and social welfare programmes.

If trustworthy digital public infrastructure is designed and implemented effectively, it can help countries achieve their national priorities and accelerate progress towards their sustainable development goals. For example, in India, UPI, is a mobile based payment DPI that facilitates interbank, peer-to-peer, and person-to-merchant transactions and services. It allows government organisations and private companies to use direct transfer to reach 80 million unbanked women, who previously received their salaries in cash. This directly contributes to achieving the gender equality goal through furthering financial inclusion and economic empowerment.

DPI can also reduce administration, make public services more efficient and improve security by providing an alternative means of authentication to traditional forms of ID. This improved infrastructure is especially impactful for low- and middle- income countries where it can accelerate growth by an estimated 20-30%.

Professor Crowcroft said: "In the past four years, we have come to share our understanding of trustworthiness in many dimensions of digital identity. In the next phase of our work, over the course of the next 3 years, we shall extend this understanding to digital infrastructures in general, and to digital public infrastructures in particular."

Top image credit: Rodion Kutsaiev on Unsplash