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Postal Service selects SecureKey for online ID project

Monday 26 August 2013 11:54 CET | News

SecureKey Technologies, a Canadian online authentication services provider, has won a USD 15.1 million contract with the Postal Service to provide a cloud-based infrastructure to let agencies authenticate identities online, Washington Technology reports.

Under the terms of the deal, SecureKey will provide software configuration, hosting, help desk and third-party integration. The goal is to let individuals securely access different online government services such as health benefits, student loan information and retirement benefit information using the same credential. Known as the Federal Cloud Credential Exchange or FCCX, this kind of approach negates the need to have different usernames and passwords to access each system.

FCCX will let people use approved third-party credential providers to access the government systems. The project helps implement President Obama’s National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace and the Identity, Credential and Access management program SecureKey said in an announcement.

There already are several approved third-party providers of credentials including Citibank, Entrust, Digicert, Google, PayPal, Symantec, VeriSign and Verizon who provide credentialing services for other identity authentication programs such as secure access cards.

The government hopes to lower costs by using a cloud-based exchange that all agencies can tap into instead of each agency building and maintaining their own, separate identity management system.

Eighteen companies bid on the project.


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Keywords: Postal Service, SecureKey Technologies, online ID, FCCX
Categories: Fraud & Financial Crime
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