Login, change your address, subscribe to new or manage current magazines or e-newsletter subscriptions
Computerworld Publication PageNetworkWorld Publication PageCIO Canada Publication PageITJobUniverse.ca
- The Information, Communication and Technology (ICT) Job Board
Advanced Search
Knowledge Centres
Content Types
Featured White Papers
Unlock the potential of data with the right data warehouse solutionUnlock the potential of data with the right data warehouse solution read more
IBM Multiform Master Data Management: The evolution of MDM applicationsIBM Multiform Master Data Management: The evolution of MDM applications read more
Closing the data privacy gap: Protecting sensitive data in non-production environmentsClosing the data privacy gap: Protecting sensitive data in non-production environments read more
Yuk it Up
Green IT Playbook
Connect with the experts
IT is being asked to build storage infrastructures at lower costs. At the same time storage networks are deluged with content, driven by rich digital media and new governance and compliance rules. How can we better prepare for this ongoing onslaught on our storage resources? Join Shane Schick, Editor in Chief of IT World Canada, and his guests John Sloan, Senior Research Analyst, Info-Tech Research Group and Jim Decaires, Storage Product Manager, Fujitsu, for a one-hour webinar that will separate the hype from the reality and enable you to achieve more with less.
Gartner Research Note
Gartner reviews enterprise-class email archiving products that were able to prove, through strong references, their ability to address the needs of an organization looking to support enterprise email users. Discover which vendors are in the Magic Quadrant that combines completeness of vision with the ability to execute. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by Mimosa Systems Inc.
It History Knowledge
Sign-Up for
Communications Infrastructure
eNewsletter Delivered Weekly
Click here
Page 1 of 1

Diversinet puts personal records in your Wallet

The Toronto-based firm's MobiSecure application allow users to view, e-mail and fax personal records from a mobile phone. Why the health-care sector is an early adopter

Toronto-based Diversinet Corp. has announced new versions of its MobiSecure Wallet and Vault applications for secure mobile access to medical and personal information.

The software Wallet creates a one-time password for access to the vault, with the smart phone or PDA itself serving as the second factor in a two-factor authentication system, according to Stuart Vaeth, the company’s chief security officer.

Files are stored in the server-side Vault application and can be downloaded to the wallet on the phone. “The safety deposit box is a good analogy,” Vaeth said. Not only does the Vault application validate the phone accessing the account, “the phone actually validates the server based on a shared key” known only to the server and the device. “Data at rest is always encrypted,” and data in transit is encrypted by the password, Vaeth said.

The information is stored as data cards, wrapped in an XML document to allow presentation on the phone. The information can be viewed, e-mailed or faxed to another device.

There can be multiple wallets for a single vault, and users can temporarily delegate access to the vault to another device, for example, if a user goes to a new medical clinic that’s not equipped with the software.

“If they’re not a vault user … you can do that by generating a one-time password” for access through the clinic’s PC, Vaeth said.

The MobiSecure applications are the engine that drives the Mobile Lockbox service from Intersections Inc., which provides risk and identity management services. Users can aggregate their personal records and monitor their credit and identity information. It’s a subscription-based service, a value-add to Intersections’ Identity Guard offering.

Network World Canada

For more on communications and networking technology, visit Network World Canada

AllOne Health Group, launched by the Hospital Service Association of Northeastern Pennsylvania, is offering AllOne Mobile, to allow users mobile access to their health records. And while Diversinet is exploring relationships with Canadian health care providers, there are fundamental differences in the systems that make the U.S. the primary market, said Jay Couse, the company’s senior vice-president of business development.

In the U.S., where there is no public health insurance program, 200 million people are insured by companies like Blue Cross. There’s competition and churn and cost pressure, according to Couse, and the insurers are looking for a stickier relationship. Providing properly formatted eligibility and payment forms speeds processes and cuts customer service costs, and pushing fitness, dietary and blood pressure tools out to clients can reduce clinic visits.

In the U.S., personal health records are the property of the individual, whereas in Canada, the records are owned by the provincial health authority. So a Diversinet offering for the Canadian market would have to be focused on the provider, rather than the patient, Couse said.

Canada Health Infoway, funded to the tune of $1.6 billion, has the goal of getting 50 per cent of health records to electronic versions by 2010, and offers incentives for practitioners to buy PCs and practice management software. “Interesting, but it’s not really relevant to what our objectives are,” Couse said.

However, as innovative health providers move farther along with electronic health records, they are looking to extend what they can do with the records, Couse said.

Bill Nagel, an Amsterdam-based security and risk management researcher with Forrester Research, said what stands out about the Diversinet product is that it puts security, information provisioning and storage components together in a single offering.

"There are a number of solutions out there that use the mobile phone as a security device at different levels," Nagel said. "Some use the phone as a security token, delivering one-time passwords via SMS or via an on-handset Java application for use when logging in to, say, an online banking site. Other, more sophisticated and secure models, use the SIM card to store secure PKI-based identity credentials and perform authentication completely out-of-band. The latter type could be said to be more secure than Diversinet's offering, but they're also more complex and expensive to set up and run."

There are also solutions that are primarily messaging and service delivery platforms that might offer better functionality, Nagel said. "But one thing I like about Diversinet is that it's first and foremost a security platform that uses that as the basis upon which messaging and storage services are delivered, rather than being a messaging and storage solution that has the security bolted on after the fact," he said.

Nagel sees a potential market for the MobiSecure offering in any industry that handles sensitive data that must be delivered to strongly authenticated parties. Aside from health care, the legal profession and e-government are likely markets, though "as a practical matter I think government moves too slowly for there to be any chance of major adoption of a MobiSecure-type solution anytime soon," he said.

Page 1 of 1
Send to a Friend  Rate This Page  Print This PageAdd a new comment
Bookmark this article on:
del.icio.us| Digg it| Furl| Google| Technorati| StumbleIt| Yahoo!

Have something to say about this article? Add a new comment

If you find a comment inappropriate, You can notify the moderator by clicking the Report an innapropriate comment icon.
ADD A COMMENT
Name:*Your email address will not appear online and will be used only in the event that the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comment.
City:
Email:
Title:*
Comment:*
* required fields



Related Content
Articles

Special Advertising Partners
IDC Case Study: Identity And Access Management Buying Criteria.
IDC analyses IAM buying criteria and deployment at Coppin State University. Coppin State replaces "first generation" IAM solution to obtain benefits needed for today's agile enterprise: ease of integration, rapid deployment, simplified compliance, flexibility.
White Papers
Closing the data privacy gap: Protecting sensitive data in non-production environments
How can IT organizations protect sensitive data, including employee and customer information, as well as corporate confidential data and intellectual property? Industry analysts recommend "de-identifying" or masking data as a best practice for protecting privacy. This white paper explains the importance of closing the data privacy gap in non-production environments, and provides guidance on effective data masking. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
Unlock the potential of data with the right data warehouse solution
Once you've made the decision to implement a new data warehouse, you want to make sure you choose the one that's right for your organization. This buyer's guide provides checklists for starting points that you can use when evaluating vendors and their products. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.
Prepare for a more efficient SAP implementation: Take data issues off the critical path
This white paper outlines how the Preliminary Data Assessment Appliance (PDAA) from IBM can help address the challenges of integrating data from different operational applications across the enterprise to an SAP platform. Complimentary with registration. Sponsored by IBM.