Financial and Monetary Systems

How can we manage identities in the digital age?

A woman uses her Apple iPhone while waiting to cross the road. Image: REUTERS/Lucas Jackson.

David Craig
Co-Chair, TNFD
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Financial and Monetary Systems

We are on the threshold of a revolution in financial services – a findustrial revolution as it were – which promises extraordinary leaps in efficiency for all kinds of transactions. Finance is being redefined and challenged by small, agile fintech companies who specialize in the smart application of technological innovations to meet customers’ needs more efficiently and effectively than ever before.

Arguably the biggest obstacle to our society reaping the full benefit of this findustrial revolution is the issue of trust in transactions. When stock exchanges developed centuries ago, a handshake between (predominantly) gentlemen was considered enough to commit extraordinary amounts of capital to new economic ventures. When Jonathan’s Coffee House in the City of London developed into London Stock Exchange, its motto was (and still remains) Dictum Meum Pactum – my word is my bond.

Fast forward to the 21st century and we find a financial industry recovering from enormous reputational damage following not only the global financial crisis but a succession of trading scandals. We also find a society concerned increasingly about personal security, following high profile cyber attacks on business in an attempt to harvest customers’ personal data.

The secret to all of this therefore is to find reliable and secure ways to help people confirm their identities in the digital world and to manage their identities safely.

The obvious example of the challenge is that favourite fintech buzzword: Blockchain. The opportunities afforded by distributed ledger technology enable everyone transacting in a market to see details of every trade undertaken: of who did what and when. The issue for this exciting technology – and the reason why its first appearance as the engine for Bitcoin has been so controversial – is that actors can hide behind false identities. The names they input into the system might not be what their mothers call them.

That is why the World Economic Forum is currently discussing how to bring Dictum Meum Pactum into the digital era. How can we prove how people are who they say they are?

The Forum’s Disruptive Innovation in Financial Services Project has done a great deal in the past year to build consensus across some of the key players in this industry to agree a perspective on this complex and ambiguous subject. We have brought together banks, exchanges, regulators and other authorities to look at identity in the 21st century.

In the digital world, people might have as many identities as passwords. They will have multiple avatars for their online shopping accounts, their banking, their social media posts. Each of these they may manage separately.

Each identity has a number of elements. There are those characteristics which are unchanging – date of birth is one, but also there are biometric data and DNA analysis which can help to prove an individual’s identity. There is even your heartbeat signature. Then there are the identifiers provide by authorities: permanently assigned information such as passport and social security numbers. And there is the accumulated ID of attributes which might change over time and which is based on behavior: your digital footprint, for instance, or your credit score.

Your digital ID can therefore be a rich record of your behaviours and attitudes, then. Your spending patterns can be monitored and analysed to generate credit scores and then to agree credit loans. Your digital footprint might provide useful evidence for pricing more accurately your health insurance. Your associations with peer groups might indicate your likelihood of managing your finances effectively. Your behaviours might also indicate you are a “safe” person to provide financial services to, in a world with heightened risk of crime and illegal activities

All of this information is theoretically possible to gather and can be attributed to your identity. But how should this be done? Who should be entrusted and empowered to do it?

Perhaps the best informed firms to manage digital identity are those with the richest store of information – those major retailers or smartphone providers which have high volume contact with their customers. They can compile and create a detailed picture of customer behavior which can contribute to understanding of an individual. Some of the earliest credit scoring companies were spun out of retailers, for example

But of course individuals want to ensure they own this information – that it is accurate and that it is used responsibly in circumstances over which they have some control.

Imagine then if you are the owner of your own, authoritative Digital ID report: a completely comprehensive record of your ID attributes, with fields automatically maintained and populated by trusted third parties. You have a credit score provided by an independent authority for instance; a record of insurance claims maintained by your insurer; a criminal record maintained by the courts.

Your word would indeed – and unarguably – be your bond.

Once we have agreed as a society how we can and should manage our identities in the digital age, the Fourth Industrial Revolution can properly get underway. The future of finance and commerce may never be the same.

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Related topics:
Financial and Monetary SystemsFourth Industrial Revolution
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