With the aim of eventually providing secure
access to government information, services and transactions, the
New Zealand Cabinet on Monday approved a set of policy
principles.
New Zealand State Services Minister Trevor Mallard said that
approval brought future e-government services one step closer
to reality.
The policy principles approved by the Cabinet set out the
government's strategy for enabling electronic communication and
authentication between citizens and government agencies or
departments.
Once the policy is carried out, individuals will be able to securely
conduct electronic transactions - such as filling out forms or making
payments - with government agencies via the Internet.
According to a government statement Monday, authentication of
an individual's identity will be necessary for any online interactions
involving the sharing of personal information.
"When the e-government programme moves into its online
transaction stage, New Zealanders must have confidence that
their personal privacy is not being breached, and agencies must
have confidence that they are delivering information and services
to the correct person," Mallard said in a prepared statement.
Mallard said a project team has now begun designing an
authentication process for e-government services in New Zealand.
This will take place over the next 15 months, he added.
Reported By Newsbytes.com, http://www.newsbytes.com .
06:45 CST
Reposted 20:28 CST