Resources
Identity Use Cases & Scenarios.
FIDIS Deliverables.
Identity of Identity.
Interoperability.
Profiling.
Forensic Implications.
HighTechID.
D3.1: Overview on IMS.
D3.2: A study on PKI and biometrics.
D3.3: Study on Mobile Identity Management.
D3.5: Workshop on ID-Documents.
D3.6: Study on ID Documents.
D3.7: A Structured Collection on RFID Literature.
D3.8: Study on protocols with respect to identity and identification – an insight on network protocols and privacy-aware communication.
D3.9: Study on the Impact of Trusted Computing on Identity and Identity Management.
D3.10: Biometrics in identity management.
D3.11: Report on the Maintenance of the IMS Database.
D3.15: Report on the Maintenance of the ISM Database.
D3.17: Identity Management Systems – recent developments.
D12.1: Integrated Workshop on Emerging AmI Technologies.
D12.2: Study on Emerging AmI Technologies.
D12.3: A Holistic Privacy Framework for RFID Applications.
D12.4: Integrated Workshop on Emerging AmI.
D12.5: Use cases and scenarios of emerging technologies.
D12.6: A Study on ICT Implants.
D12.7: Identity-related Crime in Europe – Big Problem or Big Hype?.
D12.10: Normality Mining: Results from a Tracking Study.
Privacy and legal-social content.
Mobility and Identity.
Other.
IDIS Journal.
FIDIS Interactive.
Press & Events.
In-House Journal.
Booklets
Identity in a Networked World.
Identity R/Evolution.
Selected Bibliography
Anderson, K. B. (2005), ‘Identity Theft: Does the Risk Vary With Demographics?’, Federal Trade Commission, Bureau of Economics Working Paper No. 279, available at http://www.ftc.gov/be/workpapers/wp279.pdf.
Anderson, Ross, Rainer Böhme, Richard Clayton & Tyler Moore (2008), Security Economics and the Internal Market, report for ENISA, January 2008, available at http://www.enisa.europa.eu/doc/pdf/report_sec_econ_&_int_mark_20080131.pdf.
Buitelaar, Hans (ed.) (2007), D13.3: Study on ID Number Policies, FIDIS deliverable, available at http://www.fidis.net.
De Bot, D. (2005), Privacybescherming bij e-government in België, Vanden Broele, Brugge, n°249.
De Cock, D. Ch. Wolf & B. Preneel, The Belgian Electronic Identity Card, (Overview), available at http://www.cosic.esat.kuleuven.be/publications/article-769.pdf.
Denolf, J. (ed.), Identiteitsfraude. Misdrijf van de toekomst? Fraude d’identité. Le crime du future? Politeia, Brussels, 2005.
Draps, K. (2007). Identiteitsfraude. Een routineactiviteitenbenadering, Leuvense Universiteitsbibliotheek, Leuven.
Government Accountability Office (2002), “Identity Theft: Prevalence and Cost appear to be growing”, Report to the Congressional Requesters.
Home Office Statistical Bulletin (2007), ‘Mobile phone theft, plastic card and identity fraud: Findings from the 2005/06 British Crime Survey’, available at http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs07/hosb1007.pdf.
Hoofnagle, C.J. (2007), “Identity Theft: Making the Known Unknowns Known”, 21 Harvard Journal of Law & Technology (1).
Koops, Bert-Jaap & Ronald Leenes (2006), ‘ID Theft, ID Fraud and/or ID-related Crime. Definitions matter’, Datenschutz und Datensicherheit 2006 (9), p. 553-556.
Koops, Bert-Jaap, Ronald Leenes, Martin Meints, Nicole van der Meulen & David-Olivier Jacquet-Chiffelle (2008), ‘A Typology of Identity-related Crime: Conceptual, Technical, and Legal Issues’, Information, Communication & Society (forthcoming).
Leenes, R. (ed.) (2006), D5.2b: ID-related Crime: Towards a Common Ground for Interdisciplinary Research, FIDIS deliverable, available at http://www.fidis.net/.
Moore, T. and Clayton, R. ‘An Empirical Analysis of the Current State of Phishing Attack and Defense’. Available at http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rnc1/weis07-phishing.pdf.
Pintér, Róbert (ed.) (2007), D5.2c: Identity related crime in the world of films, FIDIS deliverable, available at http://www.fidis.net/.
Savirimuthu, A. & Joseph Savirimuthu (2007), ‘Identity Theft and Systems Theory: The Fraud Act 2006 in Perspective’, 4 Script-ed (4).
United Kingdom Cabinet Office (2002), Identity Fraud: A Study, United Kingdom: Cabinet Office Publications.
De Vries, U.R.M.Th., H. Tigchelaar, M. van der Linden & A.M. Hol (2007), Identiteitsfraude: een afbakening. Een internationale begripsvergelijking en analyse van nationale strafbepalingen, Utrecht: WODC, http://www.wodc.nl/images/1496_%20volledige_tekst_tcm44-86343.pdf http://www.wodc.nl/images/1496_summary_tcm44-86342.pdf).
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D12.10: Normality Mining: Results from a Tracking Study
Within FIDIS, WP3 and WP12 have dealt with RFID, WP11 has investigated
mobility and identity while WP6 has examined biometrics and WP7 profiling.
The aim of this report is to bring these disparate threads together into a tangible
study which will demonstrate privacy issues surrounding products and services
which are likely to start emerging on to the consumer market.
New generations of mobile handsets, with integrated devices like GPS and
internet capabilities, are becoming less like traditional phones. In fact we
should stop viewing them as simply mobile phones - they are now more like
mobile computers which can make phone calls. These advances in mobile
technologies will inevitably lead to new services which we can enjoy anywhere,
anytime. Location Based Services which utilise the phone’s GPS to tell us for
example where we are, or where the nearest cinema is, are an obvious first step
– but what happens if the phone monitors where we go at all times? Can these
new services build a picture of who we are based on where we have been? Can
they use this profile of us to understand what we like and tailor their results
specifically to us? And if so, at what cost to our privacy? In this report, aimed
at the potential consumers of such services, we will look at results from a recent
tracking study which examines these issues.
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