Identity Management is DEAD!

2518864-8236474736-tombsIt’s all about CONTROL….

You CONTROL your identity
Organisations CONTROL their identity
Countries CONTROL their identity

This is the future of ‘identity management’ or ‘IDM’ or ‘IAM’. Scalability comes from bottom-up, not top-down. You CONTROL what is yours, your identity. Nothing else will work in this highly connected, growing and verbose world that we are all a part of today. That is if we, the identity owners are at all interested in owning and controlling what is fundamentally ours, our identity and our digital footprint.

An idiots guide on how Swedish ID is created

For those of you that want a quick summary of how the Swedish ID number is created… here we go..

1. The personal identity number consists of 10 digits and a hyphen.
2. The first six correspond to the person’s birthday, in YYMMDD form.
3. They are followed by a hyphen.
4. The seventh through ninth are a serial number.
5. An odd ninth number is assigned to males
6. and an even ninth number is assigned to females.
7. The tenth digit is a checksum which was introduced in 1967 when the system was computerised.

Up to 1990, the seventh and eighth digits were correlated with the county where the bearer of the number was born or (if born before 1947) where he/she had been living, according to tax records, on January 1, 1947, with a special code (usually 9 as 7th digit) for immigrants.

Everyone however keeps their number and it is not hard to find out someone’s number if you know the birth date, the birth county and the checksum algorithm. Even easier is to call the tax authority and ask, since the personal identity number is public information.

How is your Swedish ID created?

Do you want to understand how your Swedish identity number is created… or maybe not, it is explained here. If you know how it is calculated after the first 6 digits which is your date of birth, then it must be pretty easy for others to work this out?

Although I did get from a source that one can just ring up the Swedish Tax Agency and ask for any Swedish residents personal ID. I haven’t tested this yet.. but I am sorely tempted to try 😉

Glad födelsdag – Happy Birthday – for your Swedish ID#

I was surprised when taking a coffee with one of my colleagues in the office. She received an SMS thanks from another of our colleagues her for the birthday greeting. When I asked her, how did she know, she said she found it online at http://www.birthday.se/kontakta-oss/Default.aspx. She then told me when my birthday was and even a map to where I lived (although they did get this wrong). Nevertheless surprise became horror. I had already removed my details from www.hitta.se only to find myself at another site. So I checked with a previous colleague of mine (Martin Da Fonseca) that studied security law in Sweden if this was in fact legal? And this was his response.

“It is legal. The service provided by Upplysning.se is regulated in Kreditupplysningslagen (credit information legislation) (1973:1173).

I believe the service provided by birthday.se is using (or exploiting) the fact that this information is considered “public information” (allmän handling), because it is stored at a goverment agency. As part of Tryckfrihetsförordningen (“freedom of press”, sort of) (1949:105) 2:1 it says that every Swedish citizen shall have the right to access to public documents. All documented information that a goverment agency has is to be considered public. This is also regulated by Sekretesslagen (official secrets legislation) (1980:100), which states when information is to be considered secret and not part of public documentation. Personuppgiftslagen (1998:204) is also in effect here; it is applied on the actual agencies storing the information. And perhaps to some extent on companies like Birthday.se, depending on what they do with the information (if they store it).”

Should I really be surprised? Not really, as mentioned it’s not the first time in Sweden I’ve needed to remove my personal information from some public register. And getting it removed is a pain, many phone calls, and then like magic it pops up again a year or two later! I believe that this is in direct contravention of the EU directive on Data Privacy. Am I wrong here? Surely I must be? Although Sweden is quite ‘transparent’ in how it operates, there there is much trust between the government and its citizens that makes Sweden quite unique. Transparency is a part of the EU directive, although we should give our consent to sharing personal data. Maybe i have done this automatically by becoming a resident of Sweden. The personal ID is not compulsory in Sweden but its just about imposssible to operate without it. Just try taking out a prescription at the chemist without this ID, you can when they realise that they have no choice, like what happened when I lost my ID, but it takes time and is very annoying if you end up with someone that insists on following the rules. This ID is shared everywhere and is really easy to get hold of. It is composed of date-of-birth (which you can find on www.birthday.se) yymmdd-xxxx and four digits, that are even if you are female and odd if you are mail.

There are cases in the U.S. whereby the addresses of car drivers were public until some celebrity was murdered due to the availability of this information. This is evidence that placing this type of information in public domain is dangerous! Does this mean that Sweden has worse data privacy for their citizens than what is found in the U.S.? Is this possible for a country of the EU?