Phone as Personal Identifier Provider: Difference between revisions
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==References== | ==References== | ||
*[https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/10/18295348/google-android-phone-fido-webauthn-phishing-two-factor-authentication Google will now let you use your Android phone as a physical security key] using the phone and PC blue tooth connection. | |||
*[[Phone as Health Care Credential]] | *[[Phone as Health Care Credential]] | ||
*[https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/sp/1800-21/draft SP 1800-21 (DRAFT) Mobile Device Security: Corporate-Owned Personally-Enabled (COPE)] | *[https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/sp/1800-21/draft SP 1800-21 (DRAFT) Mobile Device Security: Corporate-Owned Personally-Enabled (COPE)] |
Revision as of 05:04, 20 August 2019
Full Title
Mobile Device Security: Phone as Personal Identifier Provider (PPIP)
Context
- This paper is designed to be a proposal to NIST for a SP 1800-xx document in their series of Cybersecure Infrastructure papers.
- It is an extension of the Kantara work to provide such a solution for US Healthcare.
- The following are the 3 parts of a sp 1800 document. We propose an outline of the first part below:
- SP 1800-xxA: Executive Summary (PDF)
- SP 1800-xxB: Approach, Architecture, and Security Characteristics (PDF)
- SP 1800-xxC: How-To Guides (PDF)
Challenge
Solution
Benefits
References
- Google will now let you use your Android phone as a physical security key using the phone and PC blue tooth connection.
- Phone as Health Care Credential
- SP 1800-21 (DRAFT) Mobile Device Security: Corporate-Owned Personally-Enabled (COPE)