News | National
6 Jul 2024 12:43
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    NZ is moving closer to digital IDs – it’s time to rethink how we protect our valuable data

    As the digital economy accelerates, New Zealand needs new rules to regulate how we develop new services– and who develops them.

    Markus Luczak-Roesch, Professor of Informatics and Chair in Complexity Science, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington
    The Conversation


    New Zealand shifted closer towards digital credentials for access to online services this week with the launch of the Trust Framework Authority. It will determine which organisations are verified to provide digital identity services.

    The digital ID scheme aims to ease transactions such as opening a bank account or accessing government services by moving identity verification away from physical documents.

    This has the potential to transform New Zealand’s digital economy, and Minister for Digitising Government Judith Collins has already suggested she wants to expand the government’s use of AI, including in health and education.

    But both the launch of the authority and the push to expand AI are significant developments that need to be considered in the wider context of the principles on which our digital economy runs.

    While digital ID is key to access and trust in digital services, it needs to be protected and managed in accordance with our values, including personal, community and national perspectives.

    Digital ID is only one aspect of a wider digital economy. We have to consider more systemically how we develop new digital services and who develops them.

    Our new report, collaboratively produced by researchers from the Veracity Technology Spearhead project and the domestic cloud provider Catalyst Cloud, shows how digital ID is tightly interwoven with data management and information flow more generally.

    We highlight how the latest developments open a window of opportunity to fundamentally adjust how we build digital systems towards a decentralised model that disentangles data management from data processing.

    According to a recent OECD report, such an adjustment is urgently required to ensure citizens and businesses have choices and are safe in a digital world.

    Illustration of big data flow concepts - querying, analysing and visualising complex information
    Digital systems should use a decentralised model that disentangles data management from data processing. Getty Images

    Global developments in data infrastructure

    Many countries are recognising the importance of having their own national data infrastructures.

    In Estonia, the X-Road system has been a pioneer in this field. Launched in 2001, it is the foundation of the country’s e-government services, allowing secure data exchanges between public and private sector databases.

    This infrastructure has enabled Estonia to become a leader in digital government services, from online voting to digital health records.

    The European Union’s GAIA-X project aims to create a federated data infrastructure for Europe, promoting sovereign and interoperable data spaces. Recently, the EU launched a pilot phase of its digital identity wallet initiative, with uses ranging from banking to mobile driving licences and electronic prescriptions.

    The Flanders region in Belgium is the first in the world to establish a data utility provider to drive adoption of and innovation around so-called data vaults, using the Solid platform. This includes a service that allows citizens to take full control over data they accumulate throughout their professional careers, from qualifications to payroll data from various employers.

    Local businesses give away their data

    While these global developments are promising, many local businesses find themselves in a difficult position. They rely on services provided by large tech companies for their digital operations, inadvertently handing over data in the process.

    Small retailers, for instance, may use e-commerce platforms that collect and analyse customer data. While these platforms provide valuable services, they also leak insights that can be used to compete with the very businesses they serve.

    A prominent example of the risk of uncontrolled data outflow is Samsung’s ban of the use of ChatGPT. Concerns arose that sensitive information would be leaked through the prompts employees used. This would become accessible to OpenAI and other users of ChatGPT by becoming part of the foundational language model that underpins it.

    Similarly, farmers using smart agriculture techniques may be sharing data about their crops, yields or soil quality with the service providers. This information becomes a valuable asset, but farmers cannot access or leverage it independently.

    The challenge for local businesses is clear. They need digital tools to remain competitive, but using these tools often means surrendering control over the data they collect. These data, in turn, fuel the growth and dominance of large tech companies, creating a cycle that’s difficult to break.

    Rebalancing the playing field

    AI startups should have more options for accessing a competitive foundation model than to adopt one that has been created by multinational companies under unclear conditions.

    This carries the risk of building technology that unknowingly imports components that may have been developed unethically, or which embed values that are incompatible with the local context.

    Norway has demonstrated leadership in this area. Its research centre for AI innovation, (NorwAI), develops and maintains a suite of Norwegian Large Language Models built on Norwegian data and values.

    NorwAI and the data utility company in Flanders are two examples of the potential for completely new organisational forms that generate value in a data infrastructure ecosystem. They exemplify that data infrastructures are key to rebalancing the digital economy for the benefit of everyone.

    They also show data infrastructures are not about creating walled gardens or preventing free flow of data when necessary. Instead, they provide protections so data flow happens only on agreed terms, and under full disclosure of what occurs once data have been transferred.

    The path to creating equitable national data infrastructures is complex and will require collaboration between governments, businesses and civil society. However, the potential benefits – increased innovation, fair competition and democratised access to the digital economy – make it a journey worth undertaking.

    The Conversation

    Markus Luczak-Roesch received funding from the SfTI National Science Challenge under the Veracity Spearhead grant that investigated principles of data infrastructures. he is also co-director of Te Punaha Matatini, a centre of research excellence on complex systems.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2024 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     06 Jul: The Warriors will visit an old friend in this afternoon's NRL clash against the Bulldogs in Sydney
     06 Jul: More relief is on the way for the battered East Coast
     06 Jul: The school holidays have begun and Auckland airports ready for the onslaught of travellers
     06 Jul: Dunedin's set to reap the economic impacts of tonight's All Blacks test
     06 Jul: The victim of a violent South Auckland shop attack is voicing his anger towards the criminal justice system
     05 Jul: A truck driver has been accused of driving in Auckland rush hour traffic - seven times above the legal alcohol limit
     05 Jul: Positive news for the Wellington Phoenix women on the contract front
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Surprise from the English travelling contingent at the All Blacks' wariness of England's expansive gameplan More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    NZ’s commercial rocket industry is taking off, but national space law needs a boost More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Travis Barker and Kourtney Kardashian were "workout buddies" long before they embarked on a romantic relationship 12:37

    Rugby League:
    The Warriors will visit an old friend in this afternoon's NRL clash against the Bulldogs in Sydney 12:27

    Entertainment:
    Travis and Jason Kelce's 'New Heights' podcast is going on hiatus 12:07

    Politics:
    AAP Rolling News Bulletin Jul 06, 0930 11:57

    Entertainment:
    Vanessa Hudgens has given birth to her first child 11:37

    International:
    World champion Remco Evenepoel wins Tour de France time trial, stays second overall behind Tadej Pogacar 11:17

    Entertainment:
    Coldplay will reportedly pay a seven-figure sum to their former manager after he sued the band for £10 million 11:07

    Environment:
    More relief is on the way for the battered East Coast 11:07

    Rugby:
    Surprise from the English travelling contingent at the All Blacks' wariness of England's expansive gameplan 10:47

    Entertainment:
    Christina Applegate has shared her bucket list amid her battle with multiple sclerosis 10:37


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd