Estonian ID card
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Estonian ID card (Estonian: ID-kaart) is a chipped picture ID issued in the Republic of Estonia. It is officially a primary-picture ID in Estonia, and is therefore recognised by all member states of the European Union as an official travel document. For travel outside the EU, Estonian citizens may also require a passport.
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[edit] Digital identification
The card's compatibility with standard X.509 infrastructure has made it a convenient means of identification for use of web-based government services in Estonia (see e-Government). All major banks, many financial and other web services support ID-card based authentication.
Web commentary columns of some Estonian newspapers, most notably Eesti Päevaleht, used to support ID-card based authentication for comments. This approach caused some controversy in the internet community. [1]
[edit] Public transport
Larger cities in Estonia, such as Tartu and Tallinn, have arrangements making it possible for residents to purchase "virtual" transportation tickets linked to their ID cards.
Period tickets can be bought online via electronic bank transfer, by SMS, or at public kiosks. This process usually takes less than a few minutes and the ticket is instantly active from the moment of purchase.[2]
Customers also have the option of requesting e-mail or SMS notification alerting them when the ticket is about to expire, or of setting up automatic renewal through internet banking services.
To use the virtual ticket, customers must carry their ID card with them whenever they use public transport. During a routine ticket check, users are asked to present their ID card, which is then inserted into a special device. This device then confirms that the user holds a valid ticket, and also warns if the ticket is about to expire. The ticket check usually takes less than a second.
Ticket information is stored in a central database, not on the ID card itself. Thus, to order a ticket, it is not necessary to have an ID-card reader. Ticket controllers have access to a local archive of the master database. If the ticket was purchased after the local archive was updated, the ticket device is able to confirm the ticket from the master database over GSM data link.[3]
[edit] Electronic voting
The Estonian ID card is also used for authentication in Estonia's ambitious Internet-based voting programme.
In February 2007, Estonia was the first country in the world to institute electronic voting for parliamentary elections. Over 30 000 voters participated in the country's e-election.[4]
The software used in this process is available for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.
[edit] Stored data
The chip stores digitised data about the authorised user, most importantly: the user's full name, gender, national identification number, and cryptographic keys and public key certificates.
[edit] Cryptographic use
The card's chip stores a key pair, allowing users to cryptographically sign digital documents based on principles of public key cryptography using DigiDoc. While it is possible also to encrypt documents using the card-holder's public key, this is used only infrequently, as such documents would become unreadable if the card were lost or destroyed.
Under Estonian law, since 15 December 2000 the cryptographic signature is legally equivalent to a manual signature.[5]
[edit] References
- ^ [1] PRIIT HÕBEMÄGI: Anonüümsete kommentaaride lõpetamise kommentaarid
- ^ [2] Methods to buy ID ticket
- ^ [3] ID Pilet - Korduma Kippuvad Küsimused
- ^ [4] idBlog - The number of electronic voters tripled
- ^ Elektrooniline Riigi Teataja: Digitaalallkirja seadus (this version valid from 8 January 2004 up to 31 December 2007)

