From mark at considrd.consulting Wed May 12 12:56:42 2021 From: mark at considrd.consulting (Mark Haine) Date: Wed, 12 May 2021 12:56:42 +0000 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] Proposed eKYC and IDA WG Agenda for 12-05-2021 In-Reply-To: References: , , , Message-ID: Hi All, Here is the suggested agenda for today?s WG: 1. Brief review of external Orgs & Event * Open Future World ? this week * BankID CZ * European Identity Conference * Any other orgs and events updates? 1. Agenda Items * Any main discussion points? 1. PRs & Issues Implementers draft 3 focus PR #63 / Issue #1225 - Id_evidence - Julian PR #68 ? Clarify handling of unavailable/non-matching data ?Daniel Issue #1232 ?? Owner of claims - Julian Review PRs PR #72 - Selective Abort/Omit - Daniel PR #71 ? Transformed Claims - Daniel * Note of PRs where separate documents are being raised PR #56 - transferring match/unavailability metadata PR #42 ? age verification PR #52 - defined abort/omit behaviour Other Issues that we may cover * Look ahead for distributed/aggregated claims - Issue #1242 * Pre-configured claims ? Issue #1245 * Review other issues of interest if we have time Mark +44 (0) 777 555 0344 | mark at considrd.consulting | considrd.consulting | 30 The Grange, Irvine. KA11 2EU [considrd.consulting logo][OpenID Logo] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 22151 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.png Type: image/png Size: 8458 bytes Desc: image002.png URL: From kai.lehmann at 1und1.de Wed May 12 14:53:48 2021 From: kai.lehmann at 1und1.de (Kai Lehmann) Date: Wed, 12 May 2021 14:53:48 +0000 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] Proposed eKYC and IDA WG Agenda for 12-05-2021 Message-ID: <39FD32DE-8C85-43FB-9C6B-83FD94CC43E4@1und1.de> Sorry, I won't be able to join today. One question though: Are by any chance the recordings of the virtual OpenId workshop from April 29, 2021 available online already? Thanks, Kai ?On 12.05.21, 14:57, "Openid-specs-ekyc-ida on behalf of Mark Haine via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida" wrote: Hi All, Here is the suggested agenda for today?s WG: 1. Brief review of external Orgs & Event * Open Future World ? this week * BankID CZ * European Identity Conference * Any other orgs and events updates? 1. Agenda Items * Any main discussion points? 1. PRs & Issues Implementers draft 3 focus PR #63 / Issue #1225 - Id_evidence - Julian PR #68 ? Clarify handling of unavailable/non-matching data ?Daniel Issue #1232 ?? Owner of claims - Julian Review PRs PR #72 - Selective Abort/Omit - Daniel PR #71 ? Transformed Claims - Daniel * Note of PRs where separate documents are being raised PR #56 - transferring match/unavailability metadata PR #42 ? age verification PR #52 - defined abort/omit behaviour Other Issues that we may cover * Look ahead for distributed/aggregated claims - Issue #1242 * Pre-configured claims ? Issue #1245 * Review other issues of interest if we have time Mark +44 (0) 777 555 0344 | mark at considrd.consulting | considrd.consulting | 30 The Grange, Irvine. KA11 2EU From naohiro.fujie at eidentity.jp Wed May 12 14:59:47 2021 From: naohiro.fujie at eidentity.jp (Naohiro Fujie) Date: Wed, 12 May 2021 23:59:47 +0900 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] Proposed eKYC and IDA WG Agenda for 12-05-2021 In-Reply-To: <39FD32DE-8C85-43FB-9C6B-83FD94CC43E4@1und1.de> References: <39FD32DE-8C85-43FB-9C6B-83FD94CC43E4@1und1.de> Message-ID: Hello Kai, You can get the recording from OpenID Foundation's website. https://openid.net/oidf-virtual-workshop-thursday-april-29-2021/ Naohiro 2021?5?12?(?) 23:53 Kai Lehmann via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida < openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net>: > Sorry, I won't be able to join today. > > One question though: Are by any chance the recordings of the virtual > OpenId workshop from April 29, 2021 available online already? > > Thanks, > Kai > > > ?On 12.05.21, 14:57, "Openid-specs-ekyc-ida on behalf of Mark Haine via > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida" behalf of openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net> wrote: > > > > > > Hi All, > > > Here is the suggested agenda for today?s WG: > > > > 1. Brief review of external Orgs & Event > > > * Open Future World ? this week > * > BankID CZ > * > European Identity Conference > * > Any other orgs and events updates? > > > > 1. > Agenda Items > > > * Any main discussion points? > > > > 1. PRs & Issues > > Implementers draft 3 focus > PR #63 / > Issue > > #1225 < > https://bitbucket.org/openid/ekyc-ida/issues/1225/id_document-is-too-narrow> > - Id_evidence - Julian > PR #68 ? > Clarify handling of unavailable/non-matching data ?Daniel > Issue > #1232 < > https://bitbucket.org/openid/ekyc-ida/issues/1232/spec-does-not-allow-the-op-to-explicitly> > ?? Owner of claims - Julian > > Review PRs > PR #72 - > Selective Abort/Omit - Daniel > PR #71 ? > Transformed Claims - Daniel > > > * Note of PRs where separate documents are being raised > > PR #56 - > transferring match/unavailability metadata > PR #42 ? age > verification > PR #52 - > defined abort/omit behaviour > > Other Issues that we may cover > > * Look ahead for distributed/aggregated claims - > > Issue #1242 < > https://bitbucket.org/openid/ekyc-ida/issues/1242/look-ahead-for-provided-claims-in > > > * Pre-configured claims ? > > Issue #1245 < > https://bitbucket.org/openid/ekyc-ida/issues/1245/pre-configured-claims-ekyc-requests > > > * Review other issues of interest if we have time > > > Mark > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > +44 (0) 777 555 0344 | mark at considrd.consulting | considrd.consulting > | 30 > The Grange, Irvine. KA11 2EU > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From saschapreibisch at gmail.com Thu May 13 04:28:58 2021 From: saschapreibisch at gmail.com (Sascha Preibisch) Date: Wed, 12 May 2021 21:28:58 -0700 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships Message-ID: Hi all! Today at the meeting I looked at the term 'nationalities' and wondered if that is accurate. If I am not mistaken anyone can have exactly one nationality which represents the country a person was born in. Citizenship on the other hand is granted to a person. For example, my nationality is German but in addition I could become a Canadian citizen. The list of citizenships would be German, Canadian, nationalities only German. Therefore, shall we rethink where we use one vs. the other? Thanks, Sascha -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From torsten at lodderstedt.net Thu May 13 08:39:35 2021 From: torsten at lodderstedt.net (Torsten Lodderstedt) Date: Thu, 13 May 2021 10:39:35 +0200 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Sascha, interesting question ;-) We had a long discussion about nationality and nationalities in the early days of eKYC. The consensus was that a person can indeed have more than one nationally. That?s why we made it an array. Because you raised the question, I just looked it up as well and it seems nationally can be used to designate both: the country where you were born as well as the citizenship with a country granted to a person. best regards, Torsten. Sascha Preibisch via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida < openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net> schrieb am Do. 13. Mai 2021 um 06:29: > Hi all! > > Today at the meeting I looked at the term 'nationalities' and wondered if > that is accurate. > > If I am not mistaken anyone can have exactly one nationality which > represents the country a person was born in. Citizenship on the other > hand is granted to a person. For example, my nationality is German but > in addition I could become a Canadian citizen. The list of citizenships > would be German, Canadian, nationalities only German. > > Therefore, shall we rethink where we use one vs. the other? > > Thanks, > Sascha > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From msalle at nikhef.nl Thu May 13 10:13:19 2021 From: msalle at nikhef.nl (Mischa Salle) Date: Thu, 13 May 2021 12:13:19 +0200 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20210513101318.GA9096@nikhef.nl> Hi all, On Thu, May 13, 2021 at 10:39:35AM +0200, Torsten Lodderstedt via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida wrote: > Hi Sascha, > > interesting question ;-) We had a long discussion about nationality and > nationalities in the early days of eKYC. The consensus was that a person > can indeed have more than one nationally. That?s why we made it an array. > > Because you raised the question, I just looked it up as well and it seems > nationally can be used to designate both: the country where you were born > as well as the citizenship with a country granted to a person. Out of curiosity, how does that work for temporary residents in countries like The Netherlands or Finland where citizenship goes via that of the parents and not via that of the country of birth. For example, if someone with Dutch parents is born in Finland, the child only gets Dutch citizenship and a Dutch passport. Are you saying they can also claim Finish nationality? Best wishes, Mischa > Sascha Preibisch via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida < > openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net> schrieb am Do. 13. Mai 2021 um > 06:29: > > > Hi all! > > > > Today at the meeting I looked at the term 'nationalities' and wondered if > > that is accurate. > > > > If I am not mistaken anyone can have exactly one nationality which > > represents the country a person was born in. Citizenship on the other > > hand is granted to a person. For example, my nationality is German but > > in addition I could become a Canadian citizen. The list of citizenships > > would be German, Canadian, nationalities only German. > > > > Therefore, shall we rethink where we use one vs. the other? > > > > Thanks, > > Sascha > > -- > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > > > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida -- Nikhef Room 1.14 Science Park 110 Tel. +31-6-4681 2202 1098 XG Amsterdam Fax +31-20-592 5155 The Netherlands Email msalle at nikhef.nl __ .. ... _._. .... ._ ... ._ ._.. ._.. .._.. From sgmouy at stephanemouy.com Thu May 13 15:03:12 2021 From: sgmouy at stephanemouy.com (Stephane MOUY) Date: Thu, 13 May 2021 15:03:12 +0000 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: If I can make a suggestion, this would be to focus on ?nationality? and forget about ?citizenship?, which often relates to the exercise of civil & political rights in a given country or environment (such as, critically, the right to vote) and tend to be country/situation-specific. In France, you are a French citizen when you are a French national and have the right to vote (i.e. over 18 years-old). The other reason to focus on nationality is that this is what is relevant for the ICAO 9303 Doc specs on Machine-Readable Travel documents (passports). This makes an explicit reference to ?Nationality? ? not to Citizenship. And, incidentally, you obviously can have more than one nationality ? my wife and daughters have two (French & British). Lastly, although I can think of use cases where citizenship as opposed to nationality would be relevant (access to polling stations maybe?), I am not sure these should be treated as a priority? Hope this helps. St?phane De : Openid-specs-ekyc-ida De la part de Torsten Lodderstedt via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida Envoy? : jeudi 13 mai 2021 10:40 ? : OpenID eKYC Identity Assurance Working Group Cc : Torsten Lodderstedt Objet : Re: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships Hi Sascha, interesting question ;-) We had a long discussion about nationality and nationalities in the early days of eKYC. The consensus was that a person can indeed have more than one nationally. That?s why we made it an array. Because you raised the question, I just looked it up as well and it seems nationally can be used to designate both: the country where you were born as well as the citizenship with a country granted to a person. best regards, Torsten. Sascha Preibisch via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida > schrieb am Do. 13. Mai 2021 um 06:29: Hi all! Today at the meeting I looked at the term 'nationalities' and wondered if that is accurate. If I am not mistaken anyone can have exactly one nationality which represents the country a person was born in. Citizenship on the other hand is granted to a person. For example, my nationality is German but in addition I could become a Canadian citizen. The list of citizenships would be German, Canadian, nationalities only German. Therefore, shall we rethink where we use one vs. the other? Thanks, Sascha -- Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 5989 bytes Desc: not available URL: From mark at considrd.consulting Thu May 13 15:14:01 2021 From: mark at considrd.consulting (Mark Haine) Date: Thu, 13 May 2021 15:14:01 +0000 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships In-Reply-To: <20210513101318.GA9096@nikhef.nl> References: <20210513101318.GA9096@nikhef.nl> Message-ID: I think there maybe many different rules for different countries. In the case of Ireland a person is entitled to Irish citizenship if their parent or grandparent was born on the island of Ireland (including Northern Ireland which is actually part of the United Kingdom). A somewhat extreme example I suspect. I would suggest we stay away from the rules of how citizenship and nationality are established and focus on communicating the status at the point of verification. Mark ?On 13/05/2021, 11:13, "Openid-specs-ekyc-ida on behalf of Mischa Salle via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida" wrote: Hi all, On Thu, May 13, 2021 at 10:39:35AM +0200, Torsten Lodderstedt via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida wrote: > Hi Sascha, > > interesting question ;-) We had a long discussion about nationality and > nationalities in the early days of eKYC. The consensus was that a person > can indeed have more than one nationally. That?s why we made it an array. > > Because you raised the question, I just looked it up as well and it seems > nationally can be used to designate both: the country where you were born > as well as the citizenship with a country granted to a person. Out of curiosity, how does that work for temporary residents in countries like The Netherlands or Finland where citizenship goes via that of the parents and not via that of the country of birth. For example, if someone with Dutch parents is born in Finland, the child only gets Dutch citizenship and a Dutch passport. Are you saying they can also claim Finish nationality? Best wishes, Mischa > Sascha Preibisch via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida < > openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net> schrieb am Do. 13. Mai 2021 um > 06:29: > > > Hi all! > > > > Today at the meeting I looked at the term 'nationalities' and wondered if > > that is accurate. > > > > If I am not mistaken anyone can have exactly one nationality which > > represents the country a person was born in. Citizenship on the other > > hand is granted to a person. For example, my nationality is German but > > in addition I could become a Canadian citizen. The list of citizenships > > would be German, Canadian, nationalities only German. > > > > Therefore, shall we rethink where we use one vs. the other? > > > > Thanks, > > Sascha > > -- > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > > > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida -- Nikhef Room 1.14 Science Park 110 Tel. +31-6-4681 2202 1098 XG Amsterdam Fax +31-20-592 5155 The Netherlands Email msalle at nikhef.nl __ .. ... _._. .... ._ ... ._ ._.. ._.. .._.. -- Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida From peter.bc at kompany.com Thu May 13 18:10:13 2021 From: peter.bc at kompany.com (Peter Bainbridge-Clayton) Date: Thu, 13 May 2021 18:10:13 +0000 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships In-Reply-To: References: <20210513101318.GA9096@nikhef.nl>, Message-ID: I think the important thing to bear in mind is that even for people with dual (or more!) nationalities, any one ID document only shows the nationality granted by one jurisdiction, so the verification is dependent on the document they choose to use for that service, irrespective of what other nationalities they may have. Pete ________________________________ From: Openid-specs-ekyc-ida on behalf of Mark Haine via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida Sent: 13 May 2021 16:14 To: Mischa Salle ; OpenID eKYC Identity Assurance Working Group Cc: Mark Haine Subject: Re: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships I think there maybe many different rules for different countries. In the case of Ireland a person is entitled to Irish citizenship if their parent or grandparent was born on the island of Ireland (including Northern Ireland which is actually part of the United Kingdom). A somewhat extreme example I suspect. I would suggest we stay away from the rules of how citizenship and nationality are established and focus on communicating the status at the point of verification. Mark ?On 13/05/2021, 11:13, "Openid-specs-ekyc-ida on behalf of Mischa Salle via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida" wrote: Hi all, On Thu, May 13, 2021 at 10:39:35AM +0200, Torsten Lodderstedt via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida wrote: > Hi Sascha, > > interesting question ;-) We had a long discussion about nationality and > nationalities in the early days of eKYC. The consensus was that a person > can indeed have more than one nationally. That?s why we made it an array. > > Because you raised the question, I just looked it up as well and it seems > nationally can be used to designate both: the country where you were born > as well as the citizenship with a country granted to a person. Out of curiosity, how does that work for temporary residents in countries like The Netherlands or Finland where citizenship goes via that of the parents and not via that of the country of birth. For example, if someone with Dutch parents is born in Finland, the child only gets Dutch citizenship and a Dutch passport. Are you saying they can also claim Finish nationality? Best wishes, Mischa > Sascha Preibisch via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida < > openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net> schrieb am Do. 13. Mai 2021 um > 06:29: > > > Hi all! > > > > Today at the meeting I looked at the term 'nationalities' and wondered if > > that is accurate. > > > > If I am not mistaken anyone can have exactly one nationality which > > represents the country a person was born in. Citizenship on the other > > hand is granted to a person. For example, my nationality is German but > > in addition I could become a Canadian citizen. The list of citizenships > > would be German, Canadian, nationalities only German. > > > > Therefore, shall we rethink where we use one vs. the other? > > > > Thanks, > > Sascha > > -- > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > > > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida -- Nikhef Room 1.14 Science Park 110 Tel. +31-6-4681 2202 1098 XG Amsterdam Fax +31-20-592 5155 The Netherlands Email msalle at nikhef.nl __ .. ... _._. .... ._ ... ._ ._.. ._.. .._.. -- Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida -- Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From saschapreibisch at gmail.com Thu May 13 18:51:29 2021 From: saschapreibisch at gmail.com (Sascha Preibisch) Date: Thu, 13 May 2021 11:51:29 -0700 Subject: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships In-Reply-To: References: <20210513101318.GA9096@nikhef.nl> Message-ID: I only brought up this topic because I am a German (nationality: German) living in Canada. Here I can apply for a Canadian citizenship. As I have just learned, the Canadian passport would say: Nationality: Canadian. With that I would have two nationalities, although only one per passport. Having that in mind, I think 'nationalities' will work fine in the context of eKYC. Thanks, Sascha On Thu, 13 May 2021 at 11:10, Peter Bainbridge-Clayton via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida wrote: > I think the important thing to bear in mind is that even for people with > dual (or more!) nationalities, any one ID document only shows the > nationality granted by one jurisdiction, so the verification is dependent > on the document they choose to use for that service, irrespective of what > other nationalities they may have. > > Pete > > ------------------------------ > *From:* Openid-specs-ekyc-ida < > openid-specs-ekyc-ida-bounces at lists.openid.net> on behalf of Mark Haine > via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida > *Sent:* 13 May 2021 16:14 > *To:* Mischa Salle ; OpenID eKYC Identity Assurance > Working Group > *Cc:* Mark Haine > *Subject:* Re: [OpenID-Specs-eKYC-IDA] nationalities vs citizenships > > I think there maybe many different rules for different countries. > > In the case of Ireland a person is entitled to Irish citizenship if their > parent or grandparent was born on the island of Ireland (including Northern > Ireland which is actually part of the United Kingdom). A somewhat extreme > example I suspect. > > I would suggest we stay away from the rules of how citizenship and > nationality are established and focus on communicating the status at the > point of verification. > > Mark > > > ?On 13/05/2021, 11:13, "Openid-specs-ekyc-ida on behalf of Mischa Salle > via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida" on behalf of openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net> wrote: > > Hi all, > > On Thu, May 13, 2021 at 10:39:35AM +0200, Torsten Lodderstedt via > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida wrote: > > Hi Sascha, > > > > interesting question ;-) We had a long discussion about nationality > and > > nationalities in the early days of eKYC. The consensus was that a > person > > can indeed have more than one nationally. That?s why we made it an > array. > > > > Because you raised the question, I just looked it up as well and it > seems > > nationally can be used to designate both: the country where you were > born > > as well as the citizenship with a country granted to a person. > > Out of curiosity, how does that work for temporary residents in > countries like The Netherlands or Finland where citizenship goes via > that of the parents and not via that of the country of birth. For > example, if someone with Dutch parents is born in Finland, the child > only gets Dutch citizenship and a Dutch passport. Are you saying they > can also claim Finish nationality? > > Best wishes, > Mischa > > > Sascha Preibisch via Openid-specs-ekyc-ida < > > openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net> schrieb am Do. 13. Mai 2021 > um > > 06:29: > > > > > Hi all! > > > > > > Today at the meeting I looked at the term 'nationalities' and > wondered if > > > that is accurate. > > > > > > If I am not mistaken anyone can have exactly one nationality which > > > represents the country a person was born in. Citizenship on the > other > > > hand is granted to a person. For example, my nationality is German > but > > > in addition I could become a Canadian citizen. The list of > citizenships > > > would be German, Canadian, nationalities only German. > > > > > > Therefore, shall we rethink where we use one vs. the other? > > > > > > Thanks, > > > Sascha > > > -- > > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > > > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > > > > > > -- > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > > > -- > Nikhef Room 1.14 > Science Park 110 Tel. +31-6-4681 2202 > 1098 XG Amsterdam Fax +31-20-592 5155 > The Netherlands Email msalle at nikhef.nl > __ .. ... _._. .... ._ ... ._ ._.. ._.. .._.. > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > -- > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida mailing list > Openid-specs-ekyc-ida at lists.openid.net > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-specs-ekyc-ida > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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