The Three Pillars of Trust: Adopting a New Service Architecture for Trusted Transactions with Government on the Internet

The Three Pillars of Trust: Adopting a New Service Architecture for Trusted Transactions with Government on the Internet All organizations - including federal agencies - must leverage technologies that exist today to secure online transaction systems for E-Gov. Until now, fragmented silos of security technologies have been used to protect individual applications, data, or users. In a world of Webconnected smart phones and interactive social networks, however, these silos are under increasing pressure with the integration of transactional services. These pressures - combined with the rising cost of risk management, compliance, and security - present an unsustainable condition for trusted transactions.

The solution is moving to a new architecture of trust that directly addresses the need to provide secure, convenient services that scale to hundreds of millions of users conducting billions of transactions. A transaction occurs every time a user clicks the mouse on a link, which initiates a "request/receive" process driving pieces of a particular back-end E-Gov service.

What you will learn from this article:

  • The importance of guaranteeing identity and the need for protecting privacy;
  • How to improve online transaction security;
  • Why a trust service model is critical to the future of E-Gov.

Listen to Mike Ozburn's interview on this white paper




Around the Network

Our website uses cookies. Cookies enable us to provide the best experience possible and help us understand how visitors use our website. By browsing inforisktoday.co.uk, you agree to our use of cookies.