SMART CARDS in GOVERNMENT - Secure Technology ...

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The 9th Annual Conference SMART CARDS in GOVERNMENT Identity, Security & Healthcare Nov. 16-19, 2010 • Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, DC

Transcript of SMART CARDS in GOVERNMENT - Secure Technology ...

The 9th Annual Conference

Smart CardS in GovernmentIdentity, Security & Healthcare

Nov. 16-19, 2010 • Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, DC

Remote Services Reduce wait times and manage resources. Applicants can initiate enrollment via kiosk or web and set appointments online or via phone.

Enrollment and Front-End Processing Efficiently and securely verify identity and process applicants.

Back Office Database Management Provide “behind-the-scenes” database management and transaction processing solutions, including investigative services, case management and exceptions management.

Secure ID Design and Production Leverage L-1 card structure and production domain knowledge to ensure an ideal combination of security, efficiency, durability and convenience.

Post Issuance Authentication Ensure the validity and authenticity of IDs to facilitate travel, border management, voting and other citizen applications.

Built on a flexible and scalable

platform, our end-to-end solutions

serve a trusted role within the

world’s most important identity

management programs. They

also form the foundation behind

the most secure IDs used today,

including National IDs, Voter

Registration Cards, Passports,

Alien Resident Cards, and Secure

Driver’s Licenses.

Protecting and Securing Personal Identities and AssetsB I o m e t r I c S • S e c u r e c r e d e n t I A l I n g • e n t e r P r I S e A c c e S S S o l u t I o n S e n r o l l m e n t S e r v I c e S • g o v e r n m e n t c o n S u l t I n g S e r v I c e S

L-1’s End-to-End Solutions —Making Smart Cards Smarter

Visit us at Smart Cards in Government - Booth #303

www.l1Id.com 978.215.2400 / [email protected]

INTRODUCTION

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 1

Welcome to the Conference

November 17, 2010

Dear 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Conference Attendees,

I welcome everyone to the 2010 Smart Cards in Government: Identity, Security, and Healthcare Conference and Exhibition. We are pleased to be holding the 2010 edition of this conference and exhibition at the roomy and centrally located Washington DC Convention Center. I hope everyone will take full advantage of the excellent conference program, networking opportunities, demonstrations in the exhibit hall, and good food and drink with friends and colleagues this week.

Since we last came together as a community of government and industry leaders at the last Smart Cards in Government Conference in October 2009, there has been an acceleration of the implementation and usage of government issued PIV credentials across the federal enterprise. We’ve also observed a rush of investment by state, local, city, and commercial ID badge issuers to explore the deployment of PIV Interoperable (PIV-I) credentials that meet the same technology standards and issuance policy requirements that federal government issuers follow but allows these non-federal issuers options to apply access security and strong authentication to non-federal applications and services, such as eGovernment and eBusiness services, healthcare services, and first responder and emergency management services.

Cybersecurity has also become a major part of the identity and security market in 2010. The naming of Howard Schmidt as Cybersecurity Coordinator and Special Assistant to President Obama was the first major step forward. The subsequent release of the draft National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC) this summer has lead to a significant increase in discussion and debate about a public-private partnership between the federal government and business on how to address the growing cybersecurity threats to our country and establishing public trust to increase internet commerce to stimulate the economy.

The healthcare IT industry has probably witnessed in the last twelve months the most rapid change this segment has ever experienced. Stimulated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in 2009 which included the HITECH Act that mandated changes in “meaningful use” of electronic health records, emergency medical records, personal health records, and requirements for protecting sensitive health information, the policy makers and technology leaders from the government and private industry have begun to reshape the enormous and hugely complicated U.S. healthcare information technology infrastructure.

All of these programs are breaking new ground in expanding identity management on a global scale and smart card technology remains at the center of the technology solutions be debated. Attendees will have the opportunity to hear from the government policy leaders, federal agency directors, and industry experts behind these programs over the next three days. The Smart Card Alliance will continue to be a powerful force in the government market and continue to lead educational conferences, workshops, and webinars on identity, security, and strong authentication best practices.

The Smart Card Alliance wishes to recognize the 10 year Anniversary of the Department of Defense Common Access Card (CAC). The entire government identity and security industry can trace its roots back to the first Common Access Cards issued in 2000. The progress made over the last ten years in building up a smart card infrastructure and aligning the identity management systems and policies that govern them will be something to build on to get our nation through the security challenges ahead.

Whether you are a government employee, industry representative, or interested observer, I welcome each and every one of you to this Smart Card Alliance event and hope that you will continue to participate in the Smart Card Alliance all year round.

Randy Vanderhoof Executive Director Smart Card Alliance

INTRODUCTION

2 8th Annual Smart Cards in Government Conference 2009 • October 27-30

Sponsoring Organizations

Gold, USB Proceedings Token Sponsors

Silver, Friday Lunch Sponsor Silver Sponsor

Badge Sponsor Oktoberfest Reception Sponsor

Thursday AM Break Sponsor Wednesday AM Break Sponsor

Wednesday PM Break Sponsor Oktoberfest Beer Host

Oktoberfest Beer Host Oktoberfest Beer Host

Media and Association Sponsors

Table of Contents Introduction ............................................................................................ 1 Sponsors ................................................................................................ 2 Conference Locator ............................................................................... 3 Conference Agenda ............................................................................... 4 Speaker Biographies ............................................................................. 8 Exhibition Floor Plan ............................................................................ 23 Exhibitor Descriptions .......................................................................... 24 SCA Leadership Council ...................................................................... 36 SCA Member Organizations ................................................................ 37 SCA Industry Councils ......................................................................... 38

Conference Program Committee Smart Cards in Government was created through the work of an extensive conference program committee. We would like to offer a special thank you to everyone involved with the 2009 Conference Program Committee: This event would not be possible without their guidance.

About the Smart Card Alliance The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology. The Alliance invests heavily in education on the appropriate uses of technology for identification, payment and other applications and strongly advocates the use of smart card technology in a way that protects privacy and enhances data security and integrity. Through specific projects such as education programs, market research, advocacy, industry relations and open forums, the Alliance keeps its members connected to industry leaders and innovative thought. The Alliance is the single industry voice for smart card technology, leading industry discussion on the impact and value of smart cards in the US and Latin America.

191 Clarksville Road Princeton Junction NJ 08550 1-800-556-6828 1-609-799-5501 [email protected] www.smartcardalliance.org

INTRODUCTION

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 3

Conference Event Locator

Tuesday, November 16 Registration and Coffee .............................................................................................................. 8:00 – 8:30 .......................................................... Concourse Workshop: PIV I Credentialing Workshop* ................................................................................. 8:30 – 5:00 ........................................................ Room 140A Workshop: GlobalPlatform Card Technology Training (Cont’d from Monday)*........................... 8:30 – 5:00 ........................................................ Room 140B CSCIP Certification Exam Prep Course* .................................................................................... 8:30 – 4:00 ........................................................ Room 144C CSCIP/G Certification Exam Prep Course* ................................................................................. 1:00 – 4:00 ........................................................ Room 144B ICAM Information Day* ............................................................................................................... 9:30 – 4:00 ................................................... Room 143ABC Lunch ......................................................................................................................................... 12:00 – 1:00 ............................................ [Served In Rooms]

Wednesday, November 17 Registration ................................................................................................................................. 8:30 – 7:30 .......................................................... Concourse Keynote Plenary Sessions ......................................................................................................... 9:00 – 12:00 ......................................................... Room 145 Conference Break, Exhibit Hall Opens ...................................................................................... 10:15 – 11:00 ........................................................ Room 146 Lunch in Exhibit Hall ................................................................................................................... 12:00 – 2:00 ......................................................... Room 146 Physical Access Council Meeting* ............................................................................................. 12:30 – 2:00 ....................................................... Room 140A Plenary Panel Sessions .............................................................................................................. 2:00 – 5:15 .......................................................... Room 145 Conference Break in the Exhibits ................................................................................................ 3:15 – 4:00 .......................................................... Room 146 Networking Reception in Exhibit Hall .......................................................................................... 5:15 – 7:30 .......................................................... Room 146

Thursday, November 18 Continental Breakfast in the Exhibits .......................................................................................... 8:30 – 9:00 .......................................................... Room 146 Exhibits Open .............................................................................................................................. 8:30 – 4:00 .......................................................... Room 146 Conference Sessions Tracks 1 & 2 ............................................................................................ 9:00 – 12:00 .................................................. Room 145/147 Conference Break in the Exhibits .............................................................................................. 10:15 – 10:45 ........................................................ Room 146 Lunch in Exhibit Hall ................................................................................................................... 12:00 – 2:00 ......................................................... Room 146 Identity/Healthcare Council Meeting* ......................................................................................... 12:00 – 2:00 ....................................................... Room 140A Conference Sessions Track 1 & 2 ............................................................................................... 2:00 – 5:15 ................................................... Room 145/147 Conference Break in the Exhibits ................................................................................................ 3:15 – 4:00 .......................................................... Room 146

Friday, November 19 Coffee .......................................................................................................................................... 8:30 – 9:00 ......................................................... Concourse Conference Sessions Tracks 1 & 2 ............................................................................................ 9:00 – 12:00 .................................................. Room 145/147 Gala Lunch ................................................................................................................................. 12:30 – 1:15 .................................................. Room 143ABC Birds of a Feather: Accelerating Adoption of PIV I ...................................................................... 1:15 – 3:00 ........................................................ Room 140A CSCIP Certification Exam* .......................................................................................................... 3:00 – 5:00 .......................................................... Room 144

*Separate registration required.

AGENDA

4 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Conference Agenda Pre-Conference Workshops

Tuesday, November 16 PIV I Credentialing Workshop: Strategies for the Implementation of PIV I Secure Identity Credentials

8:30 – 5:00 Room 140A

The market for non-federal government and commercial issuance of trusted identification credentials have aligned around the smart card-enabled federal government FIPS 201 PIV identity credential standard, known today as PIV-I (or PIV Interoperable). This full day, interactive Smart Card Alliance educational workshop will explain the requirements of PIV interoperable identity credentials and examine real life business applications and usage models for implementing trusted identity credentials that comply with the technology, credential issuance policy, and security infrastructure for secure access applications.

Agenda:

9:00 Opening comments and introduction of course instructors, Randy Vanderhoof, Executive Director, Smart Card Alliance

PART ONE: What Are PIV and PIV – I Identity Credentials and the ICAM Architecture

9:30 PIV Technology and Policy Requirements, Steve Rogers, Intellisoft

10:00 Policy Requirements for PIV–I Issuers, Sal D’Agostino, IDMachines, LLC

10:30 Break

10:45 ICAM Policies & Procedures, Tony Damalas, Diebold

PART TWO: Why Should PIV Interoperable Policies and Security Infrastructures Be Deployed?

11:15 Access Security Usage Models for PIV–I Trusted Identity Credentials, Roger Roehr, Roger Roehr Consulting

12:00 Lunch

1:00 Health IT Services Usage Models for PIV–I Trusted Identity Credentials, Michael Magrath, Gemalto

1:40 Government eServices Usage Models for PIV–I Trusted Credentials, La Chelle LeVan, Probaris

2:20 Break

PART THREE: Next Steps Towards PIV–I Credentials Being Implemented

2:45 State and Federal Government Usage Models on PIV–I/FRAC

Speakers: Karyn Higa – Smith, Program Manager, DHS S&T; Kenneth Boley/ Stephan Papadopulos, DC Government Office; Duane Stafford, Commonwealth of

Virginia; Amy Crabill, Deputy, Cecil County Maryland Dept of Emergency Services

4:15 Wrap UP and Conclusions of Workshop, Randy Vanderhoof, Executive Director, Smart Card Alliance

Workshop: GlobalPlatform Card Specifications Technical Training

8:30 – 5:15 (Cont’d from Monday) Room 140B

Presenter: Michael Neumann, President, Agile Set

This session, emphasizing the use of GlobalPlatform specifications for ID/credentialing, will give an overview of GlobalPlatform card definitions and provide further information the on roles, responsibilities and recognized business models within the sector. GlobalPlatform Card Specification v2.2 will also be explained in detail, along with the most recent amendments to GlobalPlatform Card Specification v2.2:, Amendment A, C and D. The session will conclude with an overview of GlobalPlatform Card Specification mapping guidelines. The training is open to GlobalPlatform members and non-members

ICAM Information Day

9:30 – 4:00 Room 143ABC

The ICAM Information Sharing Day is to provide another educational and information sharing forum for all Federal agencies to discuss and focus on issues related to implementation activities of PIV and ICAM programs. This ICAM Information Day will focus on defining the implementation requirements of the SHA-256 migration (basically discussing the issues to become SGA-256 ready) and continue to discuss the electronic functionality of PIV and PKI operations which significantly affect ICAM implementation initiatives. Open to agency employees and contractors sponsored by fed agencies and holding a PIV. Separate registration required.

CSCIP/Government Training and Exam Prep Course 8:30 – 4:00 Room 144C

This CSCIP smart card training and certification exam prep course is an instructor-lead smart card training course for the CSCIP and CSCIP/Government certification candidates before sitting for the CSCIP or CSCIP/Government Certification Exam

AGENDA

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 5

Plenary Sessions

Wednesday, November 17 Smart Cards in Government 2010

9:00 – 5:15 Room 145

8:00 Conference Registration & Coffee

9:00 Opening Remarks and Keynote Plenary Sessions (PS11)

Trusted Identity Over the Internet, Ari Schwartz, Sr Internet Policy Advisor, NIST • Healthcare Security Standards for EHR Meaningful Use, Carl Gunter, Professor, Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

10:15 Exhibits Open, Networking Break in Exhibit Hall

Deluxe complimentary coffee beverage service in booth 306 by break sponsor

11:00 Plenary Session Keynote Speakers (PS12)

Cybersecurity, Innovation, and the Internet Economy, Craig Spiezle, Executive Director, Founder & CEO, Online Trust Alliance • F/ICAM: Next Steps for Federal ICAM Architecture, Deborah Gallagher, Chair, Roadmap Development Team, GSA

12:00 Lunch in Exhibit Hall

2:00 Plenary Session Keynote Panel 1: Enabling Trust in the Physical World and in the “Clouds” (PS13)

Current trends and approaches to establishing trusted identities and enabling trusted access in the physical world and in cyberspace

Panelists: Judith Spencer, Identity, Credential & Access Management, Office of Technology Strategy, Office of Governmentwide Policy, GSA • Michael Garcia, Cybersecurity Strategist, Department of Homeland Security • Don Thibeau, Executive Director, openid.net

3:15 Networking Break in Exhibit Hall

Deluxe complimentary coffee beverage service in booth 307 by break sponsor

4:00 Plenary Session Keynote Panel 2: Solving the Healthcare Dilemma--Are Security Tradeoffs OK? (PS14)

Debating the dilemma facing the healthcare policy and technology experts over what security standards should be mandated and optional for electronic health information exchanges

Panelists: Deborah Lafky, Office of Interoperability and Standards, Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), Department of Health and Human Services • Paul Contino, VP, IT, Mount Sinai Medical Center • Deven McGraw, Director, Health Privacy Project, Center for Democracy & Technology • Richard Campanelli, Director of Government Relations, Health & Human Services, Lockheed Martin

5:15 Reception in Exhibit Hall, sponsored by

Booth 403

7:30 Exhibit Hall Closes for Night

AGENDA

6 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Track Sessions

Thursday, November 18

Track 1: Technology & Applications Room 145

Track Sponsor

8:30 Coffee in the Exhibits

9:00 Gov ID: Technology and Apps (TA21)

Moderator: William MacGregor, Computer Scientist, NIST • PIV Requirements Heard, and Ways to Meet Them, Ketan Mehta, Associate, Booz Allen Hamilton • PIV Usability Failures and Fixes, Mary Theofanos, Computer Scientist, NIST • Where PIV Is Not Applicable, PIV-I Can Help, Tim Baldridge, Computer Scientist, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center • Filling the Gaps With New Standards, Sal Francomacaro, Computer Scientist, NIST

10:15 Networking Break in Exhibit Hall

10:45 Gov ID: Trusted Identity in the Physical World and Cyberspace (TA22)

Moderator: Lolie Kull, Consultant, HP • The National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace: How We Get There, Neville Pattinson, VP, Government Affairs & Standards, Gemalto • Participating in the Identity Ecosystem, Gordon Hannah, Managing Director, Deloitte Consulting • Public Sector Identity Proofing Requirements for Cloud Computing, Kevin McDonald, Sr. Analyst, ICF Cybersecurity Solutions • Multi Domain Authentication for Government ID Cards, Kirk Spring, Chief Engineer, SafeNet Inc.

12:00 Lunch in Exhibit Hall

2:00 Biometrics: Advances in Iris and Fingerprint Biometrics (TA23)

Moderator: Bryan Ichikawa, VP, Identity Solutions, Unisys Corp. • Innovations in Biometrics, Tim Meyerhoff, Director, LG Iris Technology Division • The Trend towards Multi-Modal Biometrics, RJ Langley, VP, Daon • Enhanced Card Security, from Smart Cards and Level One Features to Biometric Authentication, Brett Tally, Civil ID Product Manager, MorphoTrak

3:15 Networking Break in Exhibit Hall

4:00 Exhibits Close

Track 2: Implementation & Policy Room 147

Track Sponsor

8:30 Coffee in the Exhibits

9:00 Gov ID: Federal PIV Implementation and Policy (IP21)

Moderator: R. Kirk Brafford, Sr. Manager, Deloitte & Touche • Pentagon PACS to PIV, Roger Roehr, HSPD-12 Physical Security Engineer, Pentagon Force Protection Agency • GSA PIV Implementation and Policy, William Erwin, Director, ICAM Office, US GSA • HHS PIV Implementation and Policy, Tracy Hollis, IAM@HHS Program Manager, HHS • Federal PIV Implementation & Policy, Vicki Fleming, Sr. IT Specialist, Treasury FMS

10:15 Networking Break in Exhibit Hall

10:45 Gov ID: Non Federal PIV Implementation and Policy (IP22)

Moderator: Karyn Higa-Smith, Program Manager, DHS • TSCP Cross Credentialing with States, Keith Ward, Director, Enterprise Security & Identity Management, Northrop Grumman • Virginia Commonwealth PIV I Credentialing, W. Duane Stafford, Governor's Office of Commonwealth Preparedness • DC One Card, Bryan Sivak, Chief Technology Officer, Government of the District of Columbia • Lessons From Illinois Government PIV-I System Deployment, Dennis Glavin, PMP, CGN & Associates

12:00 Lunch in Exhibit Hall

2:00 Healthcare: Identity and Security (IP23)

Moderator: Dale Grogan, Director of Smart Card Initiatives, S.M.A.R.T. Association • German Health Card, Fabiola Bellersheim, Segment Advisor for eHealth, Giesecke & Devrient • Federal Policy on a National Health Identifier, Lisa Gallagher, Sr. Director, HIMSS • SESAM Vital Health Card, Jacques de Varax, Directeur du Groupement d'Intérêt Economique, SESAM-Vitale • Memorial Hospital HealthID Program, Lawrence Carbonaro, Patient Access Director, Memorial Hospital

3:15 Networking Break in Exhibit Hall

4:00 Exhibits Close

AGENDA

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 7

Track 1: Technology & Applications (cont’d) Room 145

4:00 Healthcare: Health IT and Electronic Medical Record Security (TA24)

Moderator: Ola Martins, Business Development Manager, Healthcare, Oberthur Technologies • ONC Privacy and Security Tiger Team Recommendations, Deven McGraw, Director, Health Privacy Project, Center for Democracy & Technology • Smart Cards and Standards for U.S. Health Insurance and Patient IDs, Michael Magrath CSCIP, Director, Business Development, Gemalto • Security vs. Convenience the Healthcare Provider Dilemma, Greg Sarrail, Director, Business Development, HID Global •

5:30 Adjourn

Track 2: Implementation & Policy (cont’d) Room 147

4:00 Citizen Identity: Security of Network-Connected Devices (IP24)

Moderator: Walter Hamilton, Sr. Consultant, International Biometric Industry Association • Security of Network-Connected Devices, Joerg Borchert, VP Chip Card & Security ICs, Infineon Technologies • PIV-I and States Identity Credential and Access Management, Bob Donelson, President, OCFW, LLC • Port of LA TWIC Implementation, Jill Taylor, Deputy Director of Homeland Security, Port of Los Angeles; Nick Ingerto, Customs and Border Security, Unisys • TSA-Approved BASIC Airport Security Program, Colleen Chamberlain, Staff VP, American Association of Airport Executives

5:30 Adjourn

Track Sessions

Friday, November 19 Track 1: Technology & Applications (Government ID)

9:00 – 3:00 Room 145

8:30 Coffee

9:00 Advances in Cryptography for Identity Authentication (TA31)

Moderator: David Nichols, Director, Market Strategy, HID Global • Cryptographic Migration and the PIV Card, Tim Polk, NIST • Rebuilding the Federal PKI Bridge, Chris Louden, Director, Protiviti • OPACITY Standard for Lightweight Authentication, Eric Le Saint, Director of Research & Security, ActivIdentity Corp. • GlobalPlatform's Government Task Force Initiatives--Linking Specifications to Known Standards, Kevin Gillick, Executive Director, GlobalPlatform

10:15 Break

10:45 Global Standards for ID Verification (TA32)

Moderator: Steve Rogers, President & CEO, Intellisoft Inc. • Next Steps for ICAM Part 2, Ron Martin, Physical Security Specialist, Office of Security and Strategic Information, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services • PIV I Interoperability Requirements, Tim Baldridge, Computer Scientist, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center • TWIC Reader Specifications, Gerald Smith, Senior Consultant, ID Technology Partners, Inc. • PIV for PACS, Lars Suneborn, Government Program Director, Hirsch Electronics

12:00 Lunch Break Room 143

1:15 Birds of a Feather Session: Accelerating Adoption of PIV I (TF33) Room 140A

Moderators: Thomas Lockwood, Sr. Advisor, DHS Screening Coordination, Department of Homeland Security ; Jim Zok, Director, Identity and Privacy Assurance, CSC

3:00 Adjourn

Track 2: Implementation & Policy (Government ID)

9:00 – 3:00 Room 147

8:30 Coffee

9:00 International: Government Use Cases (IP31)

Moderator: Willy Dommen, Principal, Booz Allen Hamilton • German Citizen ID, Dietmar Wendling, VP, Market Sector e-Government, SCM Microsystems GmbH • Australia’s National Electronic Health Transition Authority (NEHTA), Stephen Burmester, Program Manager, NEHTA • US Army’s Base Access Smartcard Program, Jay Orgeron, Program Manager, Northrop Grumman • Smart Card-Based Portable Health Record Solution--China & India Trials, Sarah Ye, Sr. Industry Manager, Watchdata System

10:15 Break

10:45 Identity and Access Programs Use Cases (IP32)

Moderator: Robert Merkert, Business Development, SCM Microsystems • CAC Convergence of Identity and Payments, Bob Gilson, Management & Program Analyst, U.S. Department of Defense: Defense Manpower Data Center • Booz Allen Hamilton PIV I Logical Access Pilot, Michael Waters, Manager of Enterprise Information Security, Booz Allen Hamilton • GPO Expanded ID Manufacturing Program, Stephen LeBlanc, Managing Director, SID, Government Printing Office • How NCI and Research Partners are Improving Business Processes, Cindy Cullen, CTO, SAFE BioPharma Association; Steven Friedman, Chief, Clinical Trials Operations and Informatics Branch, NIH

12:00 Lunch Break Room 143

1:15 Birds of a Feather Session: Health IT Security Roundtable (IF33) Room 140B

Moderator: Ola Martins, Business Development Manager, Healthcare, Oberthur Technologies

3:00 Adjourn

Join Your Fellow Conference Delegates

HARVEST

Sponsored by

Fall 2010 Reception. In the Exhibit Hall, November 17, 5:15-7:30

It’s part of the shared human experience of planting and harvesting for survival, going back centuries around the world: An annual celebration which occurs around the time of the main harvest for the region. Festivals typically feature feasting, both family and public, with foods that are drawn from crops that come to maturity around the time of the festival. Ample food and freedom from the necessity to work in the fields are two central features of harvest time.

In Asia, the Chinese Moon Festival is one of the most widely-spread harvest festivals in the world. In India, Pongal in January, Holi in February-March and Onam in August-September are a few famous harvest festivals. Numerous religious holidays, such as Sukkot, have their roots in harvest festivals.

In Britain it is both a Church festival giving thanks to God for the harvest, and a more secular festival remembered in schools. In both Canada and the USA it has become a national secular holiday with religious origins.

Though the form of every celebration is different, the content is similar: It is a time to take stock of all that has come to pass, celebrate the good and banish the bad, give thanks for continuing sustenance, and enjoy the fellowship of shared community.

We’re serving a selection of the best food and drink of the

season. Stop by these sponsor booths for special beverages

Booth 403

 

Booth 307

 

 

Booth 313

 

 

Booth 500 

SPEAKERS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 9

Speaker Biographies

Tim Baldridge Computer Scientist, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center

Tim Baldridge is a Computer Scientist at the NASA George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. In this senior position of the NASA Enterprise Application Competency Center under the Chief Information Officer he serves as the Solution Architect for the NASA Identity, Credential and Access Management (ICAM) Line of Business (LoB). Since 2001 Mr. Baldridge has provided technical leadership for proposing, engineering, deploying, operating and sustaining the systems which now comprise the NASA ICAM LoB. Mr. Baldridge is a Co-Chair of Architecture Working Group under the Federal Identity, Credential and Access Management Sub-Committee. He is also the Chairperson and represents NASA on the Government Smart Card – Interagency Advisory Board (IAB). He was the Chairperson for the Technical Working Group under the IAB during the initial development of FIPS 201 and related special publications for which the IAB contributed significant input to the review process for these Federal ICAM foundation documents. He also served as an Experiment Engineer for the Imaging Spectrometric Observatory on the Joint NASA and ESA SpaceLab Missions. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Engineering for Engineering Science and a Master of Science in Engineering for Computer Information and Control Engineering both from the University of Michigan. (TA21, TA32)

Fabiola Bellersheim Segment Advisor for eHealth, Giesecke & Devrient

After working 6 years for an international management consulting company in Germany and Indonesia Fabiola Bellersheim joined Giesecke & Devrient in 1996. Until 2005 she was head of Strategic Marketing and Business Development for the division Currency Automation Systems. Since 2005 she joined the newly established Division “Government Solutions” as segment advisor ehealth focusing on international smart card enabled ehealth projects. She is now responsible for the segment ehealth and manages within G&D the whole project of the German patient data card. Fabiola Bellersheim holds a degree in Master of Business Administration (Technical University Aachen and University of Urbana Champaign, Illinois). (IP23)

Joerg Borchert VP Chip Card & Security ICs, Infineon Technologies

Dr. Joerg Borchert is the Vice President of Chip Card & Security ICs for Infineon Technologies North America Corp responsible for the region Americas. This business group of Infineon provides secure microcontroller and memories for a broad spectrum of applications. The North American market is focused on Pay TV, IT (Mobile Phones, Server and PCs) and Government related applications such as ID cards and ePassport. Dr. Borchert joined Siemens Semiconductors, the predecessor of Infineon, in 1992 and has worked in the Chip Card & Security group since 1994, as well as in the Wireless Products group from 2002 to 2005. He has managed the Business Line Government ID from 2008-2010 in HQs in parallel to his role in the Americas. He studied Mechanical Engineering, Business Administration and Economics, and received his Ph.D. in Economics, at the Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany. He filed several security related patent inventions in US. (IP24)

R. Kirk Brafford Sr. Manager, Deloitte & Touche LLP

Kirk is currently a Senior Manager in the ICAM practice of Deloitte leading a team which supports PIV credentialing operations in addition to implementing enterprise Identity and Access Management solutions for federal agencies. Previously he was Vice President of the Security Solutions Division of MAXIMUS, providing HSPD12 program and implementation support for several Federal agencies. His involvement in the smart card industry began when he led the start-up of North American business operations for G&D America. (IP21)

Stephen Burmester Program Manager, NEHTA

Stephen Burmester has used his ICT skills in various sectors over the 11 years and is currently holding three role. These roles are; as the Program Manager for Identity and authentication at the National Electronic Health Transition Authority (NEHTA); an Enterprise Architect at Queensland Health; and as an ICT Architect at The Agincourt Group. His previous positions have been within Queensland

SPEAKERS

10 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Transport as an Enterprise Architect and Main Roads as an SAP Integration Consultant. Steve has a Bachelor Information Technology from QUT. (IP31)

Lawrence Carbonaro Patient Access Director, Memorial Hospital

Lawrence Carbonaro is the director of purchasing and patient retention at The Memorial Hospital in North Conway, New Hampshire (IP23)

Colleen Chamberlain Staff Vice President, American Association of Airport Executives

Colleen Chamberlain is the Staff Vice President of Transportation Security Policy at the American Association of Airport Executives. In this position, Colleen engages with the DHS and TSA on behalf of airport members and is responsible for strategic policy development and timely communication on all aviation security-related issues. Colleen also serves as the primary contact for the Biometric Airport Security Identification Consortium (BASIC), an airport-driven effort to proactively address biometric credentials and access control at airports. Prior to joining AAAE in August 2005, Colleen served in a number of aviation and federal affairs positions with the Illinois Department of Transportation, United Airlines and the House of Representatives. She graduated cum laude from Marquette University. (IP24)

Paul Contino VP, IT, Mount Sinai Medical Center

Paul Contino is Vice President of Information Technology for the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City which is one of the country’s largest and premier teaching hospitals. Mr. Contino oversees Mount Sinai’s application environment, which encompasses all clinical, financial and administrative systems used by the hospital and school of medicine. In addition to the support and maintenance of the institutions critical application portfolio, Mr. Contino is responsible for the overall architecture of all custom developed applications and databases. Over his 20 years of service at Mount Sinai, Mr. Contino has held a number of key IT positions. (PS14)

Cindy Cullen CTO, SAFE BioPharma Association

Cindy Cullen is CTO of SAFE BioPharma, an industry collaboration developing digital identity and signature

standards for healthcare and biopharmaceutical communities. Ms Cullen is internationally recognized for her experience in Information Technology, Identity Management, Security & Privacy, Business and Technical Risk Management, Application Security, Audit and Regulatory Compliance. She holds a Masters in Computers Science from CCNY, CISSP, CISM and SSBB. (IP32)

Willy Dommen Principal, Booz Allen Hamilton

Willy Dommen is a leader in Booz Allen’s Payment and Smart Card business. Mr. Dommen served as the hands-on advisor for the BART-Sprint mobile payment trial. He was also one of the firm’s leaders for the Homeland Security Presidential Directive (HSPD) 12 initiative. He was a key contributor on smart card, RFID and mobile payment assignments around the world, for both government and private industry including Australia, Singapore, London, New York, Washington DC, and Los Angeles, all of which started from the work he completed for Metropolitan Transportation Commission’s TransLink® program in the San Francisco Bay Area. In addition, Mr. Dommen’s client and project lists include development of national health care card programs in Italy and Australia, leading edge technology evaluation and strategy development for financial services companies, RFID strategy development for global manufacturers of electronic systems. He continues to serve clients with resolving strategic and technical issues related to contactless smart card and mobile payments technology. Mr. Dommen authors articles and presents internationally on strategic issues with regard to smart card and mobile payment systems. (IP31)

Bob Donelson President, OCFW, LLC

President of Future Workplace, OCFW, LLC for over 3 years, consulting and bringing innovation to Federal, State, Local Governments and to Business Partners alike. 32 Years of Future Workplace innovations as part of Federal Service, included: Chairing the Smart Card Interagency Advisory Board, Senior, Asset Manager for the BLM, Program Manager for the Dept of the Interiors Smart Card Program, member and Sponsor of the Smart Card Alliance. After his Federal Service he turned his focus to State, Local and other Businesses. A contributing member to the NASCIO Digital Identity Working Group and the States Identity Credential and Access Management working group. A contributor and leader in a recent Smart Card Alliance white paper focused on PIV-I for States, Counties, Locals and Businesses. (IP24)

SPEAKERS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 11

William Erwin US General Services Administration, Director, ICAM Office

William Erwin is director in the ICAM office of the US General Services Administration. (IP21)

Vicki Fleming Sr. IT Specialist, Treasury FMS

Vicki Fleming is a Senior IT Specialist for the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Management Service, User Provisioning Architecture Division, which serves as the project office for all ICAM/PIV initiatives within FMS. As a member of the project management team, she is primarily responsible for business processes, acquisition planning, and project reporting. Prior to this assignment, Ms. Fleming served as a Senior Systems Accountant for more than 20 years implementing government-wide accounting and reporting, and payment applications. Ms. Fleming earned a B. A. degree from the Un. of Maryland; is a Project Management Professional, and a Certified Business Analyst. (IP21)

Sal Francomacaro Computer Scientist, NIST

Sal Francomacaro is an Information Security specialist and Subject Manager Expert in Smart Cards, and Security Tokens, technologies, Identity Management and Access Control systems. Sal has worked in different industries covering several aspect of the Information security space: from SC application design (most notable is the Navy Cash ePurse) to System integration, SC framework for operating systems and Standards and Security Policies. He serves as Chairman of the INCITS B10.12 standard body (IC with Contacts) and he is a Microsoft Standards Certified professional. Currently he works at the NIST for the Computer Security Division where, among other things, he is one of the topic leaders for the FIPS 201 revision process. (TA21)

Steven Friedman Chief, Clinical Trials Operations and Informatics Branch, NIH

Steve Friedman, MHSA is the Chief of the Clinical Trials Operations and Informatics Branch at the Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program, NCI. Steve is responsible for the development, maintenance and enhancement of the CTEP Enterprise System (22 applications supporting nearly 1,000 cancer treatment clinical trials) as well as overseeing the operations center supporting CTEP and all protocol

development activity. Steve is a graduate of The George Washington University and a cancer survivor since 1995. (IP32)

Deborah Gallagher Chair, Roadmap Development Team, GSA

Ms. Gallagher has recently joined OGP as part of the Identity Credential and Access Management (IDAM) office. She will be continuing the work GSA has been performing to provide government wide services for IDAM and leading the second phase of the Federal Identity Credential and Access Management (FICAM) Roadmap and Implementation Guidance. She came to GSA from the Department of Homeland Security where she worked in the Enterprise Architecture PMO in the Office of the Chief Information Officer as the lead architect for the first phase – the segment architecture of the FICAM Roadmap and Implementation Guidance as well as the lead architect for the DHS ICAM segment architecture. (PS12)

Lisa Gallagher Senior Director, Privacy and Security, HIMSS

Lisa A. Gallagher, BSEE, CISM, CPHIMS serves as HIMSS’ Senior Director of Privacy and Security. In this role, she is responsible for all of the privacy and security programs and volunteer Steering Committee, Task Force and five Work Groups. As well, Ms. Gallagher provides privacy and security content support for HIMSS’ Federal and State Government relations/advocacy work. Before joining HIMSS, she served as the Certification Development Director for the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT) (www.cchit.org) , where she helped develop the product certification program for electronic health record (EHR) products. (IP23)

Michael Garcia Cybersecurity Strategist, Department of Homeland Security

In January 2010, Mike Garcia joined the National Protection and Programs Directorate as a Cybersecurity Strategist, focusing on the long-term strategic vision for the Homeland Security Enterprise. His primary role is working with the White House National Security Staff to manage, and serve as the DHS lead for, the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace and its implementation. Prior to his strategy work, Mr. Garcia spent 11 months in the Department of Homeland Security as a Business and Cyber Liaison in the Private Sector Office. (PS13)

SPEAKERS

12 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Kevin Gillick Executive Director, GlobalPlatform

As Executive Director of GlobalPlatform, Mr. Gillick is responsible for driving awareness and accelerating adoption of the GlobalPlatform Specifications within worldwide markets. Mr. Gillick coordinates and manages the organization's strategic planning and oversees all marketing and business development initiatives within key vertical market sectors. He works closely with GlobalPlatform's Technical Director, all three of the organization's technical committees - Card, Device and Systems - and the GlobalPlatform Task Forces. Mr. Gillick is directly responsible to the Board of Directors and the GlobalPlatform membership. Mr. Gillick has served as GlobalPlatform's full-time Executive Director since 2006. (TA31)

Bob Gilson Management & Program Analyst, U.S. Department of Defense: Defense Manpower Data Center

Bob Gilson is the Program Office Branch Chief with DoD Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC), Personal Identity Protection Solutions (PIPS) Division developing new applications for the Common Access Identification Card (CAC/PIV) Program. Bob is also on the Board of the Smart Card Alliance and the Document Security Alliance. He is currently developing the CONOPS for the stored value virtual wallet CAC application to replace all OCONUS Treasury CASH card products. Bob is also the POC for a proof of concept CAC transportation pilot with the Utah Transit Authority and is working with the Navy on an innovative person tracking and mustering program utilizing biometrics, dual interface chip technology and traditional barcodes. In addition, He works with cross-Federal technology development groups supporting Identity management and HSPD 12 related programs. (IP32)

Dennis Glavin PMP, CGN & Associates

Dennis Glavin is a senior manager at CGN and Associates (IP22)

Dale Grogan Director of Smart Card Initiatives, S.M.A.R.T. Association, Inc.

At SMART, Dale is responsible for product development, market positioning, and sales. Prior to his efforts with

SMART, Mr. Grogan was a founder of Leapfrog Smart Products, Inc., an early entrant into the smart card software development space. During that time, Mr. Grogan was an original member of the GSA Interoperability Standards Committee for the development and usage of smart card applications within the federal government. He is currently a member of the Healthcare Council, Healthcare Steering Committee, and the Board of Directors of the Smart Card Alliance. (IP23)

Carl Gunter Professor, Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Carl A. Gunter received his BA from the University of Chicago in 1979 and his PhD from the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1985. He worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Carnegie-Mellon University and the University of Cambridge in England before joining the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania in 1987 and the University of Illinois 2004. He is a professor in the Computer Science Department, director of Illinois Security Lab, and a member of the Information Trust Institute (ITI). Gunter has made research contributions in the semantics of programming languages, formal analysis of networks and security, and privacy. Gunter’s contributions to the formal analysis of networks and security include the Packet Language for Active Networks (PLAN), the WRSPM reference model for requirements and specifications, the first formal analyses of Internet and ad hoc routing protocols, the Verisim system for analyzing network simulations, and exploiting bandwidth contention as a DoS countermeasure. His work on privacy includes the first research on certificate retrieval for trust management and the formal analysis of regulatory privacy rules. He founded Probaris Technologies, a company in the Philadelphia area that provides credentials for employees of government agencies such as the Social Security Administration and the Patent and Trade Office. (PS11)

Walter Hamilton Sr. Consultant, International Biometric Industry Association

Mr. Hamilton is a Senior Consultant with Identification Technology Partners (IDTP), a consulting firm in the identity management field. Prior to joining IDTP in 2006, Mr. Hamilton served as Vice President and General Manager; Biometric Solutions for Saflink Corporation. Prior to joining Saflink in 1995, Mr. Hamilton completed a distinguished 30-year career with Unisys Corporation. Mr. Hamilton is a recognized industry authority and subject matter expert on biometric technology. He is serving a fifth term as Chairman and President of the International

Complete portfolio of Identity related offerings and services that can be tailored

to the clients specific needs.

BUSINESS SOLUTIONS TECHNOLOGY OUTSOURCING

CSC IDENTITY MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS BEYOND A SHADOW OF A DOUBT

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Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 15

Biometric Industry Association, a Washington, D.C.-based non-profit trade association that represents the collective interests of the biometric industry. He is a frequent speaker at conferences and symposiums related to biometrics and identity management. He also serves as Chairman of The Biometric Foundation, a non-profit research and education organization. (IP24)

Gordon Hannah Managing Director, Deloitte Consulting

Mr. Hannah is the Executive responsible for the strategy & direction of Security and Identity Management solutions and services for the BearingPoint Public Sector. He has over 17 years of Homeland Security, Federal, Intelligence, Health Care and Military sector experience and seven years of managing Enterprise Identity Management initiatives. (TA22)

Karyn Higa-Smith Program Manager, Cyber Security Division (CSD), Science and Technology Directorate (S&T), Department of Homeland Security (DHS)

Karyn Higa-Smith is the Program Manager for the following research areas: Identity Management, Privacy Enhancing Technologies, and Secure Information Dissemination in the DHS Science and Technology Directorate's Cyber Security Division (CSD). Through a practitioner-driven approach, Ms. Higa-Smith creates and deploys information resources-standards, frameworks, tools, and technologies-to enable seamless and secure interactions among homeland security stakeholders. CSD is working to strengthen America’s security and resiliency by providing knowledge products and innovative technology solutions for the Homeland Security Enterprise–comprised of homeland security practitioners across the country and at all levels of government and in industry and academia. Ms. Higa-Smith earned her Bachelor’s of Science degree in Computer Engineering at Clemson University; she has over 10 years of experience in Information Technology (IT) Security, Information Assurance, and Security Audit and Assessments for the U.S. Department of Defense and DHS. (IP22)

Tracy Hollis Lead, Logical Identity and Access Management Services, CDC

Tracy has worked as an IT Program Manager in the federal sector for 12+ years. Currently, she is the Lead for Logical Identity and Access Management Services (LIAM) in the Management Information Systems Office (MISO) at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She was detailed to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as the HHS Program Manager for Identity and Access Management (IAM@HHS) from July 09 – Sep 10. During her tenure, she was responsible for creating the strategic roadmap for IAM activities at HHS. Her latest responsibilities include the management of e-Authentication and Identity Proofing services for external partners at CDC. (IP21)

Bryan Ichikawa VP, Identity Solutions, Unisys Corp.

Bryan Ichikawa is Vice-President, Identity Solutions at Unisys Federal Systems based in Reston, Virginia. Responsible for all identity related business within the Security Practice, Bryan supports business pursuit and delivery activities across all lines of business. Bryan is also responsible for representing Unisys in industry and standards organizations for smart cards, biometrics and identity management. He has worked extensively with the Smart Card Alliance and currently serves as the Vice-chair on their Board of Directors. (TA23)

Nick Ingerto Customs and Border Security, Unisys

Mr. Ingerto has over 20 years experience in leading edge electronics, engineering, system design, maintenance, repair and manufacturing, Mr. Ingerto also has vast experience employing statistical process control principles to various access control programs. As member of Unisys Port Security practice Mr. Ingerto as served as the Port of Los Angeles subject matter expert for their participation in the TSA/DHS TWIC reader field test. Mr. Ingerto has performed security assessments, consisting of infrastructure analysis, entry point design, hardware evaluation, and Transportation Workers Identification Credential (TWIC) Compliancy studies for several large Maritime Security Act (MTSA) regulated facilities. Mr. Ingerto has also been responsible for the Design and implementation of the Access Control, Intrusion Detection and Video System, for the Puerto Rican National Guard covering over 80 locations throughout the island. As a member of the Smart Card

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Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 17

Alliance Mr Ingerto co-authored Publication PAC-05001 September 2005 titled, An Overview of the Impact of FIPS 201 on Federal Access Control Systems. (IP24)

Lolie Kull Consultant, HP

Lolie Kull, from Hewlett Packard, presently, supports the Department of Veterans Affairs implementation as the Deployment Manager/PACS Coordinator for Personal Identity Verification (PIV) card implementation. She previously served as the Program Manager for the Department of Homeland Security’s HSPD 12 office and the Transportation Security Administration's Transportation Worker Identification Credential (TWIC) Program through the Prototype Phase of the program and was responsible for implementing the U.S. Department of State’s Smart Card based Physical Access Control Program. (TA22)

Deborah Lafky Office of Interoperability and Standards, Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), Department of Health and Human Services

Deborah L. Lafky, Ph.D., CISSP is the security lead in the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC). Dr. Lafky is involved with strategic planning for health information security, risk assessment and threat awareness, identity management, and standards development. Prior to joining HHS, she was the director of IT and information security for the Cancer Family Registries, Cancer Genetics Network, and state cancer registries at the University of California, Irvine. Dr. Lafky earned her Ph.D. in MIS from Claremont Graduate University (Claremont, CA), her masters degree in information science from the University of Pittsburgh, and her bachelor of science from Carnegie-Mellon University. (PS14)

RJ Langley VP, Daon

RJ is VP of Major Programs for Daon, Inc., a leading global biometrics company, where he has played a key role supporting some of the largest biometric programs around the world: India Unique Identity, Mexico National ID, US-VISIT, European Union Biometric Matching System, and many others. He has 18 years of experience in the biometrics industry, including roles as project manager for delivering large scale national systems and R&D to advance the state of the art for biometric matching algorithms. (TA23)

Eric Le Saint Director of Research & Security, ActivIdentity Corp.

Eric Le Saint joined ActivIdentity in 1998 and contributed to numerous DoD Common Access card and PIV projects. He is now Sr. Director of Security, IP and Research. Mr. Le Saint drives the company’s technology strategy, product security improvement program, IP portfolio, standards engagement. He is one editor of ANSI B10 Generic Identity Command Set and chairman of GlobalPlatform System Committee. He is named inventor in 12 patents and applications, owns a CISSP and ISO 27001 Prov. Auditor Certification and graduated from the "Institut Supérieur de l’Aéronautique et de l’Espace" in France in 1988. (TA31)

Stephen LeBlanc Managing Director, SID, Government Printing Office

Stephen LeBlanc leads the GPO’s Security and Intelligent Documents Business Unit, guiding the agency’s businesses for electronic passports; smartcard secure credentials; Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) electronic certificates for credentialing; document transfer and authentication; as well as numerous programs producing both traditional security documents and those containing embedded electronics. (IP32)

Thomas Lockwood Sr. Advisor, DHS Screening Coordination, Department of Homeland Security

Thomas Lockwood is a member of Department of Homeland Security's senior leadership team and is currently supporting the Department’s screening coordination efforts. Applying his vision and leadership skills, he is actively engaged on identity management policy and technology efforts across a host of public and private sector applications and operations. Mr. Lockwood has led and served on multiple federal, regional, and state inter-agency and interdisciplinary public policy, safety, and emergency management executive boards, committees, and coordinating bodies. He served in the public and private sectors – including the defense-aerospace, transportation, chemical, pharmaceutical, and food sectors. (IP33)

Chris Louden Director, Protiviti

Chris Louden is a founding partner of Enspier Technologies where he served as CTO. Enspier was acquired by Protiviti, an independent risk consulting firm used by more than 1/3 of the Fortune 100 companies. Protiviti has nearly 3,000 consultants in 50 offices around the globe, and annual

SPEAKERS

18 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

revenues in excess of ½ billion annually. Mr. Louden currently leads the E-Authentication Initiative Architecture Team and the HSPD-12 Architecture Working Group. In addition, Mr. Louden also has technical oversight responsibility for Enspier’s contracts with the Federal PKI Operational Authority and the Federal PKI Policy Authority. (TA31)

William MacGregor Computer Scientist, National Institute of Standards & Technology

William I. MacGregor, Ph.D., CISSP, CISA, is the NIST Personal Identity Verification (PIV) Coordinator, directing the evolution of the FIPS 201 standard and supporting publications required by Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12. He joined the PIV team during July, 2005, in the Computer Security Division of the Information Technology Laboratory at NIST. He contributes to the development of US Federal, national, and international standards related to identification and authentication systems. Prior to NIST, Mr. MacGregor was employed by Schlumberger for twenty years, where his final position was Senior Technology Strategist, Infosec, leading the development of security solutions building on smart cards for strong authentication. (TA21)

Michael Magrath Director, Business Development, Gemalto, Inc.

Michael Magrath, business development director for the security division of Gemalto North America, is responsible for the strategic marketing, business development and government affairs activities in the government and healthcare sectors. Mr. Magrath develops and drives consensus on legislation and policy within technology, information security, privacy, and additional security-related public policy issues. In addition to supporting Gemalto's business and policy initiatives, Mr. Magrath is committed to consumer education and advocacy through Gemalto's online resource www.JustAskGemalto.com, which provides answers to consumer questions about how to better enjoy the conveniences of the digital world. He serves as vice chairman of the Smart Card Alliance's Healthcare Council and represents Gemalto on TechAmerica's Health IT Committee, the Secure ID Coalition and TechAmerica's Information Security Committee. Mr. Magrath is also a member of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) and is a Certified Smart Card Industry Professional (CSCIP). (TA24)

Ron Martin Physical Security Specialist, Office of Security and Strategic Information, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Ron has joined the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Security and Strategic Information, as a senior Physical Security Specialist. He serves as the Department’s lead Physical Security expert, responsible for the development, coordination, direction and assessment of a nation wide physical security program. To accomplish these duties, Ron develops and implements policies, procedures and methods for identifying and protecting information, personnel, property, facilities, operations and materials. He facilitates the implementation of national level guidance on agency standards, guidelines or policies for major physical security programs. Additionally, Ron leads or and participates as a technical expert in interagency study groups and committees. Ron currently serves on ASIS International Information Technology Security Council. Ron is a regular presenter at Identity Management Seminars and ASIS international seminar and exhibits. (TA32)

Ola Martins Business Development Manager, Healthcare

Ola Martins is currently the Business Development Manager for Healthcare for Oberthur Technologies. Previously she was the Engagement Manager for Oberthur’s Government market with responsibility for several high profile projects, including DoD Common Access Card, HSPD-12 (GSA, SSA, DHHS, NASA, etc.), Registered Traveler and TWIC. Prior to joining Oberthur, Ola worked with EDS (now HP) in various technical and management roles. Ola is a computer science graduate of Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield England. (TA24, IP33)

Kevin McDonald Sr Analyst, ICF Cybersecurity Solutions

Mr. Kevin T. McDonald is author of “Above the Clouds: Managing Risk in the World of Cloud Computing” and Senior Analyst Cloud Strategy for ICF International based in Washington, DC. He is an affiliate member of the government Smartcard Interagency Advisory Board, Tech America Cloud Computing Committee, the IAC-ACT Cloud Computing in Government committee, the Cloud Security Alliance and the PMIWDC International C2C representative to PMI UK. (TA22)

SPEAKERS

20 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Deven McGraw Director, Health Privacy Project, Center for Democracy & Technology

Deven McGraw is the Director of the Health Privacy Project at the Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT), where she promotes policies that protect individual privacy as personal health information is shared electronically. Ms. McGraw serves on the Health Information Technology (HIT) Policy Committee and co-chairs its Privacy and Security Workgroup. She is a magna cum laude graduate of the Georgetown University Law Center and received her Master of Public Health from Johns Hopkins University. (PS14)

Robert Merkert Business Development, SCM Microsystems

Bob is a consultant to SCM Microsystems for Business Development, in particular for reader sales to the Government. Prior to this, Bob spent years in business development and sales capacities at SCM. His primary focus has been on logical access smart card readers for government applications. He is also one of the prime movers behind the development of the SCM Microsystems physical access control readers. He was also associated with CardLogix where he had been responsible for driving the Crendentsys PIV smart card through the GSA APL process as well as focusing on smart card applications in the United States. Bob has been a long time member of the Smart Card Alliance. He is has been on the Board of Directors and has also served as a member of the Executive Committee. He is one of the founding members of the SCA Physical Access Control (PAC) Council and currently serves as the Vice Chair of the Physical Access Council. (IP32)

Tim Meyerhoff Director, LG Iris Technology Division

Tim Meyerhoff joined the US-located global business unit that oversees all strategic direction, product planning and development, global marketing, sales and service for LG’s Iris Technology business in early 2006. Charged specifically with responsibility for US sales operations and channel management Tim has key responsibilities in product development and standards issues, in conjunction with marketing, shares responsibility for OEM variants of the LG iris recognition platform. (TA23)

Michael Neumann President, Agile Set, LLC

Mike never planned to launch Agile Set, LLC, and consult to smart card clients worldwide. He planned to be an astronaut. Now, he is a Certified GlobalPlatform Trainer and editor of ISO/IEC 24727-3; a standard poised to influence future card and system architectures. After earning his MSME from Virginia Tech Mike intended to play for a year, then get serious. Seventeen years and two kids later, the serious part has yet to kick in. (GP01)

Jay Orgeron Program Manager, Northrop Grumman

Following a 20 year career in the U.S. Air Force, Mr. Orgeron entered the civilian workforce as a program manager with Northrop Grumman where he was responsible for a variety of Navy and Air Force Command and Control (C2) software programs. In 2004, Mr. Orgeron began work on a precursor of an Iraqi National Identity card for the Army Rapid Equipping Force. Following the bombing of the Mariz Dining Facility in Iraq, his team was directed to concentrate on producing and deploying the biometrically enabled smart card components for the Base Access program. Mr. Orgeron was awarded the Northrop Grumman Chairman’s Award for Excellence for his leadership in the Base Access program. (IP31)

Neville Pattinson VP, Government Affairs & Standards, Gemalto

Neville Pattinson is the Vice President for Government Affairs, Standards and Business Development at Gemalto, Inc. based in Austin, TX. Within that role Neville constantly evangelizes the need to move to smart card based solutions to protect identity and privacy in US Government policy. Neville Pattinson is a leading expert and though leader on digital security identity solutions such as smart cards, electronic passports and tokens that use secure microprocessor chips to keep identity credential data and biometrics secure and private. He’s been heavily involved in policy, planning and implementing a number of Federal Government security initiatives including the Department of Defense Common Access Card (CAC); The HSPD-12, FIPS 201 PIV credentialing program; the State Department’s ePassport and Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative technology selection; Transportation Department’s Transportation Worker Identity Credential (TWIC), the Transportation Security Administration’s Register Traveler program and the secure credentialing of First Responders. Neville serves as a Chairman of the Smart Card Alliance and

SPEAKERS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 21

Chairman of the Smart Card Alliance’s Identity Council. Neville is a founding member of the Secure ID Coalition and is active within several other associations such as TechAmerica, AAMVA, INCITS & IAPP. (TA22)

Tim Polk NIST

Tim Polk is a Computer Scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Tim has been at NIST since 1982, and joined the Computer Security Division in 1988. His work has focused on cryptographic security mechanisms since 1994, with an emphasis on PKI standardization and deployment. Tim contributed to the development of several IETF PKI standards and was co-author of RFCs 2459, 2528, 3039, 3279, and 3280. Tim is also co-author of the book “Planning for PKI”. He has degrees in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering from University of Maryland. (TA31)

Roger Roehr HSPD-12 Physical Security Engineer, Pentagon Force Protection Agency

Roger Roehr specializes in identity management and physical access control. Roger’s core competencies are in the design, installation, integration, and maintenance of electronic physical security, security video and access control systems. He is actively involved in developing standards for the integration of biometrics and smart card technology in Physical Access Control Systems (PACS). Previously he was involved in developing, testing, and implementing a wide range of integration and consulting engagements for identity management and electronic physical security. (IP21)

Steve Rogers President & CEO, Intellisoft Inc.

Steve Rogers is a recognized expert in the field of Smart Card technology, Biometrics, Physical Access Control and Identity Management Systems. Active in the security industry for 30 years as senior executive for respected firms including Radionics, Integrated Engineering, HID, and eData; Steve founded IQ Devices and is currently President and CEO of Intellisoft, Inc. He is an active member of the Smart Card Alliance, and co-founded the “PACouncil”, Steve remains active in Standards work. (TA32)

Greg Sarrail Director, Business Development, HID Global Corporation

Greg Sarrail is a director of business development, Identity and Access Management (IAM) for HID Global. In this role, he is responsible for the sales, business development and alliances of HID’s desktop and network access solutions including OMNIKEY contact and contactless readers, naviGO two-factor authentication software and Crescendo smartcards. In addition, Mr. Sarrail is responsible for the growth of HID Global’s IT Security reseller channel. (TA24)

Ari Schwartz Sr Internet Policy Advisor, NIST

Prior to his current position, Ari Schwartz was the Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT). Schwartz's work focuses on increasing individual control over personal and public information. He promotes privacy protections in the digital age and expanding access to government information via the Internet. He regularly testifies before Congress and Executive Branch Agencies on these issues. (PS11)

Bryan Sivak Chief Technology Officer, Government of the District of Columbia

Bryan Sivak was appointed by Mayor Adrian M. Fenty on October 13, 2009 to the Cabinet post of Chief Technology Officer (CTO) for the District of Columbia. As CTO, Sivak leads the Office of the Chief Technology Officer (OCTO), an organization of more than 500 staff that provides technology services and leadership for 86 agencies, 38,000 employees, residents, businesses and millions of visitors. (IP22)

Gerald Smith Senior Consultant, ID Technology Partners, Inc.

Mr. Smith is a Senior Consultant for IDTP specializing in Smart Card technology and solutions. He has over 30 years of experience deploying card solutions. Mr. Smith serves as a SCA certified trainer for the CSCIP certification program. Mr. Smith is an active participant in standards bodies. Mr. Smith previously held positions at SHARP Microelectronics, American Express, ORGA Card Systems, Zenith Data Systems, Schlumberger, VeriFone, Mars Electronics International, and the Department of Defense (DARPA).(TA32)

SPEAKERS

22 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Judith Spencer Identity, Credential & Access Management, Office of Technology Strategy, Office of Governmentwide Policy, GSA

Ms. Spencer is the Co-Chair, Identity, Credential, and Access Management Subcommittee of the Federal CIO Council. She is responsible for building consensus and promoting cross cutting solutions for Federal identity management activities across the four sectors of e-Government. This includes citizen outreach solutions, reuse of business solutions, and unified logical/physical credentialing of Federal employees as directed in HSPD 12. She is an agency expert for Identity Management in the GSA Office of Governmentwide Policy. (PS13)

Craig Spiezle Executive Director, Founder & CEO, Online Trust Alliance

As Executive Director and Founder of OTA, Craig is a widely acclaimed security, identity and privacy professional with a deep understanding of advisor to business, members of Congress, the White House and various governmental agencies, he is recognized as an advocate on the importance of consumer trust, brand protection and the need for innovation while protecting the vitality of online services and commerce. Prior to OTA, Craig spent over a decade at Microsoft, as Director of Security & Privacy Product Management for Internet Explorer, driving the development of anti-spam, anti-phishing, anti-malware and privacy enabling technologies. (PS12)

Kirk Spring Chief Engineer, SafeNet Inc.

Kirk Spring is the Chief Engineer of High Assurance Architectures for SafeNet. Mr. Spring has helped establish the company's security presence in the Government market with the development of several leading technology products. Currently Mr. Spring oversees SafeNet’s strategic development of security solutions for both its commercial and government products. Prior to SafeNet, Mr. Spring was at Harris Corporation, Allied Signal Corporation, and Hughes Ground Systems. Mr. Spring received a BSCE degree from Oakland University. (TA22)

W. Duane Stafford Statewide Credentialing Coordinator, Governor's Office of Commonwealth Preparedness

W. Duane Stafford is the Statewide Credentialing Coordinator for the Governor’s Office of Commonwealth

Preparedness in Virginia. Duane has been in the smart card industry since 2005 developing the First Responder Authentication Credential (FRAC), a PIV-I credential for emergency responders and other programs for the Commonwealth of Virginia. He has worked in the Information Technology (IT) field for over 11 years at a Fortune 500 financial institution and small information technology companies. (IP22)

Lars Suneborn Government Program Director, Hirsch Electronics

During his 30 + year career in the security industry, Mr. Suneborn has served in a variety of roles. Currently he is leading HIRSCH development of FIPS 201 compliant products and related system enhancements. Recognized as a Physical Access Control System (PACS) subject matter leader, he is a frequent speaker and an active member of the SCA PAC. Mr. Suneborn is actively involved in industry groups developing open standards for smart card and related system components. He is actively promoting Smart Card, biometric and PKI cryptographic technologies as vital components in overall system designs for high-risk, high-security facilities nationally and internationally. He is guiding US agencies in their efforts to achieve HSPD-12 / PIV compliance of enterprise level PACS. His clients include US, British and Canadian government agencies. His experience includes system design, deployment and long term sustainability programs for government facilities world wide. Mr. Suneborn developed and conducted agency specific week-long training courses for a variety of US, Canadian and British security agencies. (TA32)

Brett Tally Civil ID Product Manager, MorphoTrak

Brett Tally is the Civil Identity Product Manager for MorphoTrak. The Civil Identity group of MorphoTrak brings the full range of capabilities of Morpho Division companies, part of the Safran group, to the U.S. and Canadian identity markets. These include biometric enrollment and verification systems as well as secure document and smart card production. Before joining MorphoTrak, Brett worked for Defense, Telecommunications, and E-Commerce companies in such diverse fields as visual simulation, high availability system architecture and secure business process automation. He earned his degree in Physics from the University of California, Santa Barbara. (TA23)

SPEAKERS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 23

Jill Taylor Deputy Director of Homeland Security, Port of Los Angeles

Jill Taylor is the Deputy Director of Homeland Security for the Port of Los Angeles, a position she has held since February 2008. In this capacity, Ms. Taylor manages over $100 million in Federal and State grants, $12 million in security contracts, and the Division’s annual budget of $11 million. She is also responsible for implementing the Transportation Worker Identification Credential program at one of the busiest seaports in the nation and oversees numerous security projects throughout the port complex. Before joining the Port, Ms. Taylor completed 21 years of service in Los Angeles City Hall in the Emergency Management and Public Works Departments where she was engaged in planning, training, community outreach, and operations issues related to disaster management. She was involved in the response and recovery for numerous natural and man-made disasters including the Civil Disturbance of 1992, the Northridge Earthquake of 1994, the Floods of 2005, and the Firestorms of 2007. (IP24)

Mary Theofanos Computer Scientist, NIST

Mary Frances Theofanos is a Computer Scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology where she is the program manager of the Industry Usability Reporting Project developing standards for usability. She is a member of ISO/IEC JTC 1 SC7 and the Co-convener of the SC7/TC 159/SC4 Joint Working Group. She is the principal architect of the Usability and Security Program evaluating the human factors and usability of cyber security and biometric systems. Mary spent 15 years as a program manager for software technology at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory complex of the U.S. Department of Energy. Ms. Theofanos received the NIST Bronze Medal in 2005. (TA21)

Don Thibeau Executive Director, openid.net

Don Thibeau is the Executive Director of The Open ID Foundation, www.oidf.net an open source software identity standards organization representing leaders in internet,

SPEAKERS

24 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

enterprise and social media technology. He joined the foundation at the beginning of 2009 to represent the organization worldwide and position it for long-term growth. Thibeau has a rich background in the data, identity and social layers of both the internet and the telecom computing channel. He has both enterprise experience and entrepreneurial management expertise in exchange and consortium-based business models for data, analytics and web content. Thibeau has held senior management positions with leading organizations including Kodak, TransUnion, and LexisNexis. He was an original member of the Reed Elsevier Venture Fund. Thibeau is also founding Chairman of the Board of the Open Identity Exchange (OIX) (PS13)

Randy Vanderhoof Executive Director, Smart Card Alliance

Randy Vanderhoof is the Executive Director of the Smart Card Alliance. The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association of over 160 member firms working to accelerate the widespread acceptance of smart card technology in North America and Latin America. He came to the Alliance in January, 2002 and became the interim director in March. He was named Executive Director in August, 2002. He is also served as on the Executive Board for the Alliance as a corporate member from 1998 – 2001. Prior to joining the Smart Card Alliance, he was Senior Project Manager and Solutions Sales Manager for IBM Global Smart Card Solutions; an international product group supporting IBM’s smart card services to its global banking, healthcare, and government industry vertical teams. From 2000 to 2001, he was Vice President Business Development with First Access, Inc. a developer of contactless smart card technology for network access security and authentication. From 1995 to 2000, he worked at Schlumberger (now Gemalto) as Market Segment Manager, Campus Solutions supporting the development and marketing of smart card–based identification and payment systems. He is a graduate of Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, PA with a BS in Management Marketing. He received his MBA from Rider University in Lawrenceville, NJ.

Jacques de Varax Directeur du Groupement d'Intérêt Economique, SESAM-Vitale

Jacques de Varax is the General Manager of GIE SESAM VITALE (www.sesamvitale.fr). The main goals of SESAM VITALE today are the launching of a new health card generation and the implementation of on line services infrastructures for health professionals. SESAM-VITALE also has responsibility for coordinating the Netcards project in Europe. (IP23)

Keith Ward Director, Enterprise Security & Identity Management, Northrop Grumman Corp.

A 25+ year veteran, Keith is director of enterprise security and identity management for Northrop Grumman (NGC). He is recognized as an Information Technology executive and has business management experience in complex mission critical enterprise programs. Keith developed the strategic approach and led the remediation of the Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) across NGC. He was responsible for the strategy, planning, engineering/solution development, and implementation for enterprise Provisioning, Remote Access, CertiPath/PKI and NGC OneBadge program. (IP22)

Michael Waters Manager of Enterprise Information Security, Booz Allen Hamilton

Michael Waters is manager of enterprise information security at Booz Allen Hamilton. He is responsible for Booz Allen's information security policies and procedures, operations and business continuity management, reporting directly to the CIO. (IP32)

Dietmar Wendling VP, Market Sector e-Government, SCM Microsystems GmbH

Dietmar Wendling joined SCM Microsystems, an Identive Group company, in June 1998. He has more than 20 years expertise in various leading management positions in sales, business development, marketing and product management. Prior to joining SCM, Mr. Wendling held the general manager position at Compass Design Automation and various management positions at Mentor Graphics. Mr. Wendling holds a Diploma in informatics and communications engineering from the University of Applied Science in Augsburg, Germany. He consults various institutions and agencies as IT security expert. (IP31)

Sarah Ye Senior Industry Manager, Product and Marketing Dept., Watchdata System Co., Ltd.

Sarah has a Masters degree in Information Security and has been working in smart card industry for 9 years with both banking and telecom knowledge. She joined Watchdata in 2005 and served as technical leader in research department for almost 4 years and then joined the product and marketing department and took the Senior Industry

SPEAKERS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 25

Manager position until now. Her scope of responsibility covers the business development in the telecom and public services area. (IP31)

Jim Zok Director, Identity and Privacy Assurance, CSC

Mr. James J. Zok joined the CSC (formerly Computer Sciences Corporation) in April 2007 as the Director of Identity Management and Credentialing Initiatives (now Identity and Privacy Assurance) for the North American Public Sector. He had retired from Government service as the Associate Administrator for Ship Financial Approvals and Cargo Preference for the Maritime Administration, an agency within the U.S. Department of Transportation in January 2007, where work included development work on a number of smart card initiatives. (TA33)

Take the Conference Home With You

The Audio Archive

The 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Conference 2010 November 16-19 • Washington Convention Center • Washington, DC

The complete audio archive of the conference on USB.

Includes conference presentation slides and printed conference program. Only $175

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□ Please reserve my copy of the complete Smart Cards in Government Conference Audio Archive on USB for $175

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Drop your order at the conference registration desk. Orders received by 12:00 Noon on the last day will be available for pickup by 3:00 PM. Fax orders after the event to 646-349-5745. For assistance, call 212-866-2169

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 27

Exhibition Floor Plan

101 Lenel 310 SMARTRAC 102 HP 312 G&D 104 Ingersoll Rand 313 XTec 105 HIDGlobal 402 MorphoTrak 106 Intellisoft 403 Deloitte 109 Digital Identification Solutions 406 Teslin® Substrate by PPG Industries 112 Morpho 407 AMAG Technology 113 MELZER 408 IDTP 202 Identity Stronghold 411 Actividentity 203 Oberthur 412 Hirsch 206 Datacard 413 Aware 207 LaserCard 500 Smart Card Alliance 208 Software House 503 Smartmatic 209 Kaba Access Control 504 EK Ekcessories 212 ASK-intTag 505 BridgePoint Systems 213 CPI Card Group 506 Zebra Technologies 302 Gemalto 507 Precise Biometrics 303 L1 Identity Solutions 509 Avisian 306 NXP 512 Muhlbauer 307 Safenet 513 Emergent 309 Exponent

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

28 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Exhibitor & Sponsor Profiles Association Sponsor

ACT Canada 85 Mullen Drive

Ajax, Ontario L1T 2B3 Canada

www.actcda.com

ACT Canada is the stakeholder association, focussed on secure payment, secure identity management and other advanced applications. Now in our 20th year, we are the authority on the Canadian market, supporting our members through working with key stakeholders. We take a non-partisan approach to all issues and facilitate cooperation among and between all members groups. ACT Canada helps members understand the market, public and private sector applications and potential barriers. We facilitate knowledge transfer and thought leadership through a neutral forum, while expanding our members’ networks. Founded in 1989, ACT Canada is a non-profit membership association.

Booth 411

ActivIdentity 6623 Dumbarton Circle

Fremont CA 94555

www.actividentity.com

ActivIdentity Corporation is a global leader in strong authentication and credential management, providing solutions to confidently establish a person's identity when interacting digitally. For more than two decades, the company's experience has been leveraged by security-minded organizations in large scale deployments such as the U.S. Department of Defense, Nissan, and Saudi Aramco. ActivIdentity has over 2,500 customers worldwide and has issued more than 100 million credentials, securing the holder's digital identity.

Booth 407

AMAG Technology20701 Manhattan Place

Torrance CA 90501

www.amag.com

AMAG Technology offers intelligent networked solutions scaled to manage security management challenges from small, remote facilities to multi-national organizations located around the globe. AMAG’s Symmetry Security Management Systems can be custom designed to provide a synergistic solution with any combination of access control, digital video, identity management, alarm monitoring, intrusion, and visitor management. AMAG’s Video Management Center provides advanced capabilities, including the IP-based Symmetry™ Video Management software and Symmetry EN-9000 video servers and encoders. AMAG’s Symmetry solutions can be found in a wide spectrum of markets including government, commercial, education, transportation, healthcare, retail and banking.

Booth 212

ASK intTag2571 S. Hemlock Rd

Green Bay WI 54229

www.ask-inttag.com

ASK-intTag is a U.S.-based manufacturing joint venture between ASK and prominent label converter WS Packaging. The site is located in Burlington, VT and complies with the high security requirements of the ID market. ASK is a worldwide leading provider of contactless cards, tickets, readers and inlays with over 170 million of them delivered to more than 50 countries. The company’s technology is based on printed silver antennas, a process highly secure and durable process. ASK products for the identity market (SPiD® and CoreLam®) include contactless inlays for e-passports, e-visas, ID cards or driving license, compliant with HF or UHF ISO standards.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 29

Booth 509, Media Sponsor

AVISIAN Inc. 315 E. Georgia St.

Tallahassee Florida 32301

www.avisian.com

AVISIAN Publishing produces the industry’s leading suite of identity and security related publications. Its electronic magazines and sites – CR80News, ContactlessNews, DigitalIDNews, FIPS201.com, IDNoticias, NFCNews, RFIDNews, SecureIDNews, and ThirdFactor – cover distinct technology and application verticals. The company's print magazine, Regarding ID (re:ID), is a global leader in this rapidly growing technology sector. Collectively, more than 30,000 subscribers and 3 million annual web visitors get their ID technology news from AVISIAN magazines and sites. Learn more about the publications and the company at AVISIAN.com.

Booth 413

Aware Inc. 40 Middlesex Tpke

Bedford MA 01730

www.aware.com/biometrics

Aware, Inc. has been a leader of the biometrics industry since 1992, providing system integrators and OEMs with a comprehensive array of biometrics software components for applications including credentialing, access control, law enforcement, and border management. We provide SDKs with C libraries and reference applications for use on client workstations, as well as Biometric Services Platform (BioSP), a service-oriented application server. These products perform enrollment, fingerprint and face autocapture, image quality and compliance assurance, standards-compliant formatting and data validation, credential personalization and reading, MINEX-certified fingerprint authentication, and biometric duplicate checking.

Booth 505

BridgePoint Systems530 McCormick Street

San Leandro CA 94577-1108

www.bridgepointsystems.com

BridgePoint delivers CAC Card Reader and PIV Card Reader solutions that are HSPD-12 and FIPS-201 compliant. Whether you are looking for a Single Door System, need to upgrade an existing system or need a new networked access control system with PKI Certificate Authentication and CRL Validation, our best-in-class solutions cover the spectrum for strong authentication. We can answer any question and can help any enterprise meet NIST guidelines for high-assurance physical access systems, even where budgets are limited. BridgePoint is proud to have supported the DoD Common Access Card program for over six years with products that are designed and built with assurance in the USA, deliver speed with robust performance and meet the GSA - APL assurance requirements.

Media Sponsor

Card World3A Market Place

Uppingham Leicestershire UK

www.cardworldonline.com

Card World is the highly respected international newsletter that has been providing in depth information on the global card industry for over 20 years. Bringing the card industry to life: Card World searches out the stories you won't find elsewhere. It features interviews with industry experts and CEOs, plus detailed country reports with Card World-sourced data. Card World covers all industry sectors including mobile and internet payments. As well as these core subjects, through its association with sister publications Fraud Watch and Loyalty, Card World also provides coverage of card fraud, data security, loyalty, marketing and customer analytics. A subscription to Card World includes an online daily news service with email alerts, a published newsletter every month, access to our Source Book and special reports. For more information visit www.cardworldonline.com or email [email protected]

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

30 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Media Sponsor

CardWeb 5100 Tamiami Trail North

Naples Florida 34103

www.cardweb.com

CardWeb.com® currently serves in excess of 30,000 institutional clients in more than 39 countries via offices in the United States of America, United Kingdom, and Australia. The firm owns and operates over fifty related websites. The company's flagship web site, www.cardweb.com, attracts approximately one million unique visitors each month. Each year millions of consumers regularly come in contact with CardWeb.com's® research via the national news media. The firm has been prominently referenced by all news media and was selected by Forbes magazine as one of the "Top 250 Financial Information Web Sites". CardWeb.com® continues to prepare the monthly comparative credit card tables for the national print news media including the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, The Los Angeles Times, and many others.

Booth 213

CPI Card Group 10368 W. Centennial Rd.

Littleton CO 80127

www.cpicardgroup.com

CPI, a global leader in financial and commercial card production and related services, offers a single source for card production, data personalization, security packaging, and card fulfillment services. CPI is a certified producer of products and services under the VISA, MasterCard, American Express and Discover card association brands. CPI has seven production facilities in the United States, Canada and Western Europe and offers the largest network of certified secure facilities in North America.

Internet Cafe Sponsor

CSC3170 Fairview Pk Dr

Falls Church VA 22042

www.csc.com/government

CSC’s North American Public Sector (NPS) line of business helps government agencies achieve excellence in executing their core missions by delivering world-class information technology, business operations, and specialized engineering solutions and services. With $5.9 billion in revenue, more than 28,000 employees, and the benefits of CSC’s global commercial footprint, NPS serves just about every agency and department of the U.S. government, as well as certain state and local and Canadian agencies.

Booth 206

Datacard Group11111 Bren Road West

Minnetonka MN 55343

www.datacard.com

Datacard Group is a driving force in virtually every major card program around the world. Datacard’s secure ID and card personalization solutions are used to issue millions of financial cards and government identification documents each day. More than 40 years ago, Datacard made mass issuance of credit cards economical by inventing systems for high-volume plastic card personalization—forever changing the way consumers conduct transactions. Today, Datacard’s high-volume card issuance solutions outsell all other brands combined. Datacard built on this heritage to redefine secure identity technology. Corporations, governments and security-minded organizations have made Datacard the world's most popular brand of secure ID solutions.

Booth 403, Opening Reception Sponsor

Deloitte Services LP1919 N. Lynn St

Arlington VA 22209

www.deloitte.com/federal

With more than 6,000 practitioners dedicated to serving the federal government, Deloitte takes pride in

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 31

helping our clients get big things done in government. From headquarters to the back office to the front line, we work side by side with clients to design and implement their most strategic, complex initiatives to achieve higher levels of performance and service -- while managing risk and getting more value from compliance requirements. For years, we have helped public sector clients achieve breakthroughs in performance, transparency, and accountability. Your mission is our only agenda. It’s the Deloitte difference. Learn more at www.deloitte.com/us/federal

Booth 109

Digital Identification Solutions 111 Kiowa Lane

Piedmont SC 29673

www.digital-identification.com

Digital Identification Solutions is a worldwide provider of identity solutions. The company has sales and support centers in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Through our global network of Certified Partners, DIS can deliver state-of-the-art identity solutions to customers anywhere in the world. Our advantages include our vast experience, our quality products, our market reach, our track record and our advanced technology.

Booth 504

EK Ekcessories 575 West 3200 South

Logan Utah 84321

www.ekusa.com

2010 marks 25 years for EK Ekcessories! Our cutting edge designs and materials ensure you are getting a durable high quality product. EK Ekcessories is your stop for Smart Card holders and ID badge holders including the FIPS 201 approved Guardian and One Hander Card Holders, in addition to a huge selection of safety breakaway lanyards. We proudly manufacture in the USA.

Booth 513

Emergent8133 Leesburg Pike Ste 450

Vienna VA 22182

www.emergent360.com

Emergent is an IT solution provider focused on solving complex business and mission challenges on behalf of government, commercial, education and healthcare organizations. The Emergent team combines unmatched IT technical expertise and an extensive knowledge of the government procurement process. We work hand-in-hand with a variety of complementary IT vendors to ensure our customers receive world class IT solutions, enabling them to achieve their objectives on time and on budget. Some of our solutions include: Adobe, Symantec, VeriSign, Red Hat, SAP/Business Objects, AegisUSA, EnterpriseDB, Mythics, Precise Biometrics, Brocade, Intercede, Norman, ConnectSolutions, Jaspersoft, Oberthur, Smartmatic and more.

Booth 309, Insert Sponsor

Exponent Inc.149 Commonwealth Dr.

Menlo Park CA 94025

www.exponent.com/smartcard_testing_capabilities

Exponent is an engineering consulting firm with a staff of 800 specializing in the investigation and prevention of quality, reliability, and interoperability problems and failures. In the field of smartcards, identification technology, and identity management, we offer technical expertise to make cards, e-passports, keyfobs, equipment, systems and processes more reliable. Examples include: Standards/Specifications (FIPS201, CAC, ICAO, ISO, ANSI, etc.) Testing • Product Failure Analysis and Prevention • Quality Assurance and Interoperability Testing • Product Durability Evaluations • Program Risk Mitigation • Complex Systems Integration • In-depth Engineering and Technical Consulting. For more information, please contact Brad McGoran, P.E., 650-688-7013, [email protected], or visit http://www.exponent.com/smartcard_testing_2/ . Exponent is certified to ISO9001.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

32 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Media Sponsor

Find Biometrics

www.findbiometrics.com

findBIOMETRICS.com is the leading Biometrics Industry Resource providing free information on all biometric identification and identity verification systems and solutions. findBIOMETRICS has the latest daily news from the global biometric business community, as well as comprehensive vendor lists, informative articles, interviews with Industry Leaders, useful links to Biometric associations and a current list of related industry events and conferences.

Booth 302, Silver Sponsor

Gemalto Arboretum Plaza II, 9442 Capital of Texas Hwy North, Ste 400

Austin TX 78759

www.gemalto.com

Gemalto, the world leader in digital security, delivers on the growing demands of billions of people worldwide for mobile connectivity, identity and data protection, credit card safety, health and transportation services, e-government and national security. Gemalto supplies governments, wireless operators, banks and enterprises a wide range of secure personal devices, such as subscriber identification modules (SIM), Universal Integrated Circuit Card (UICC) in mobile phones, smart banking cards, smart card access badges, electronic passports, and USB tokens for online identity protection. To complete the solution we also provide software, systems and services to help our customers achieve their goals.

Booth 312

Giesecke & Devrient 45925 Horseshoe Dr.

Dulles VA 20166

www.gi-de.com

Giesecke & Devrient is pleased to announce that G&D StarSign FIPS 201 smart cards have been added to the GSA Approved Products List. A durable card with longer warranty for both the contact and contactless interfaces, these cards provide government customers

with the latest in smart card technology for both physical and logical access. We will also demo some of the capabilities of G&D health ID solutions. G&D is a worldwide market leader in microprocessor smart cards and leading edge security technology. Current security solutions include corporate and government ID systems, logical access, PKI, contactless ticketing, e-passport, healthcare, mobile communications, and payment.

Association Sponsor

GlobalPlatform1515 Cordilleras Road

Redwood City CA 94062

www.globalplatform.org

GlobalPlatform is the global leader in smart card infrastructure development and its proven, technical specifications for cards, devices and systems are known as the industry standard. GlobalPlatform is a member driven association with cross-industry representation from all world continents. For more information about GlobalPlatform, visit: www.globalplatform.org.

Media Sponsor

Globalsmart134 Lots Road

Chelsea SW10 ORJ UK

www.globalsmart.com

globalsmart.com in association with Smart Card Technology International is a smart card / chip technology information & news site with an online WebShow. The WebShow exhibits the products, solutions & services of smart card technology companies. globalsmart.com and SCTi together make a complete and comprehensive marketing package. globalsmart.com is the site to announce your company news updates and to promote your company's products, services and solutions. A special company page can feature your company's latest products with images and links. These promotional pages can be located from any technology, product or application category within globalsmart.com. globalsmart.com's reach is many times more powerful than any one local exhibition, which means your company is activley exhibiting 24hrs a day, everyday of the year, just keep sending us details of your latest products and services

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 33

and we will do the rest. globalsmart.com is linked to exhibitions, associations, forums and quality news providers. Inclusive in our web package is your company being featured in the publications , with a colour advertisement and company profile.

Media Sponsor

GovInfoSecurity.com 4 Independence Way

Princeton NJ 08540

www.govinfosecurity.com

GovInfoSecurity.com was formed to bring all that is risk management together for local, state and federal agencies so they can meet regulatory requirements armed with the intelligence and industry best practices they need. It's an online resource dedicated to information security, audit, risk management and compliance topics. GovInfoSecurity.com is the only such media outlet to look at information security through the eyes of the federal government. GovInfoSecurity.com’s content is refreshed daily in a variety of editorial vehicles-everything from daily news postings, personalized email updates and interactive eBooks to industry surveys, blogs and podcasts-to meet the diverse needs of our audience.

Media Sponsor

The Green Sheet, Inc. 6145 State Farm Drive

Rohnert Park Ca 94928

www.greensheet.com

Dedicated to the education and success of the ISO and MLS, The Green Sheet is a semi-monthly resource replete with timely, bias-free coverage of the evolving payments industry. It has more than 25,000 readers who depend on its regular, special and recurring features for information, education and inspiration.

Booth 105

HID Global 15370 Barranca Parkway

Irvine CA 92618

www.hidglobal.com

HID Global is the trusted leader in providing solutions for the delivery of secure identity, serving customers

worldwide with proximity and contactless smart card technologies; IP-based networked access solutions; secure and custom card solutions; photo ID & ID card application control software; high definition printer/encoders & secure card issuance solutions. Headquartered in Irvine, California, HID Global operates international offices that support more than 100 countries and is an ASSA ABLOY Group brand.

Booth 412

Hirsch Electronics Corp. 1900 Carnegie Ave.

Santa Ana CA 92705

www.hirschelectronics.com

Hirsch’s end-to-end solution for HSPD-12/FIPS201 compliance is extraordinary. Issue PIV cards: collect biometrics, link to background check, obtain a certificate from the Certificate Authority (CA), and encode and print PIV cards. Register PIV cards: instantly bring PIV card information into access control system, convert access privileges from old card to new, and deactivate old card. Use PIV cards: Choose from numerous Hirsch PIV card readers including the Verification Station which validates card, PIN code and fingerprint and then checks certificate’s validity against the OCSP or CRL using PKI. Ideal for card issuance, identity verification, visitor management, and access control.

Booth 102, Logo Water Bottle Sponsor

HP13600 EDS Drive

Herndon VA 20171

hp.com/go/cybersecurity

HP provides innovative solutions to help government agencies execute their missions. Our solutions span IT infrastructure, applications, business process outsourcing, security and privacy, imaging and printing, PCs, mobility and wireless, and global services—as well as biometrics, recognition technology, identity management and other homeland security capabilities. HP serves nearly every U.S. federal defense and civilian agency, as well as 45 state governments. Governments around the world turn to us for the mission-focused experience and expertise needed to reduce costs, streamline processes and operate more efficiently, while improving the quality and value of their services.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

34 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Booth 408

Identification Technology Partners, Inc. 12208 Pueblo Road

Gaithersburg MD 20878

www.idtp.com

IDTP is the leading consulting firm with an independent focus on the identity management and secure access industry. IDTP has assembled a partnership of recognized industry experts who support our clients with technical, business and policy related requirements for the new secure identification markets. IDTP has real-world experience in program design, technology application, and compliance testing, gained through our continued involvement in benchmark national credentialing programs and foundational industry standards initiatives. IDTP’s knowledge and experience in secure identity systems, including biometrics, smart cards and cryptography, is influencing today’s advanced identification and secure access programs. “we make ID work”

Booth 202

Identity Stronghold 517 Paul Morris Dr Ste C4-2

Englewood FL 34223

www.idstronghold.com

Identity Stronghold pioneered contactless smart card and RFID shielding technologies. We continue to lead the way in long lasting, high durability badge holders. Our FIPS-201 approved Secure Badgeholders were designed from the ground up to protect expensive contactless smartcards. We are the only FIPS 201 approved holder manufacture to make a variety of colors available. All our products are made from start to finish in the USA. Join VA, FAA, NIH, TSA, GSA and others in choosing a winner. Identity Stronghold.

Track 2 Thu Sponsor

Infineon Technologies 640 N. McCarthy Blvd

Milpitas CA 95035

www.infineon.com

Infineon provides security components for passports, identity cards and contactless payment cards. It is the leading supplier of chips for credit cards, access cards and trusted computing solutions worldwide. The company has been the world market leader in chips for card applications for eleven years in a row and continues to pioneer new technologies in the field of chip-based security. The focus on security-critical fields allows Infineon to make the most of their expertise in high-security applications as security requirements become more stringent. The Chip Card & Security Division is helping to improve data security in today’s information society. As users become ever more mobile, advanced security solutions are in high demand. Consistent deployment of security products has the potential to act as a pacesetter for cutting-edge applications in communication, transport and IT infrastructure. Infineon has the industry’s largest portfolio of chips and interfaces to meet the relevant security requirements in these areas.

Booth 104

Ingersoll Rand Security Technologies 11819 N. Pennsylvania St.

Carmel IN 46032

www.securitytechnologies.ingersollrand.com

Ingersoll Rand Security Technologies is a leading provider of products/services that help make environments safe, secure, and productive. We provide Stand Alone, Networked, Enterprise Networked, and Open Architecture solutions for every vertical market segment. Our products include, card readers and credentials, electronic and mechanical locks, access control systems and software, portable security, door closers, exit devices, steel doors and frames, architectural hardware and technologies and services for global security markets.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 35

Booth 106

Intellisoft Inc. 115 Southport Rd Stes I & J

Spartanburg CA 29306

www.ICEware.com

Intellisoft Inc., founded in 2004 and based in Spartanburg, SC, is focused on developing the best enterprise software solutions for identity management and role-based access control. We provide complete secure identity life cycle privilege provisioning and regulatory compliance across an enterprise for airports, defense facilities, corporations, and federal/state government agencies, and work seamlessly within established business IT environments. ICEware® software suite integrates disparate new and legacy physical access control systems, manages multi-modal biometrics, automates critical processes, simplifies secure identity management across an entire organization, and easily defines complex business rules creating secure identity environments.

Association Sponsor

International Card Manufacturers Association 191 Clarksville Road

Princeton Junction NJ 08550

www.icma.com

Based in Princeton Junction, NJ, USA, ICMA is a non-profit association of card manufacturers, personalizers, issuers and related industry participants. With more than 240 members globally, ICMA acts as a clearinghouse for industry issues, including the production, technology, application, security and environmental issues of transaction, identification and other cards.

Association Sponsor

Java Card Forum

www.javacardforum.org

The primary purpose of the Java Card Forum is to promote as an industry the development of Java as the preferred interpreter language for interoperable smart cards. The Forum is divided into two Committees; the

Business Committee and the Technical Committee, and they have met every quarter since the Forum was founded in 1997, successfully providing recommendations to Oracle (formerly SUN Microsystems) for the Java Card specifications, the latest version being Java Card 3.0.

Booth 209

Kaba Access Control2941 Indiana Ave.

Winston-Salem NC 27105

www.kabaaccess.com

Kaba Access Control has supplied various access control products for government and commercial applications for over 40 years, including card access solutions and pushbutton locks. Kaba’s smart card offering includes the CoreStreet enabled E-Plex 5800 series specifically designed for government organizations using FIPS 201 smart cards including TWIC, FRAC and CAC applications. It also reads DESFire cards. Another Kaba smart card solution is the CoreStreet enabled E-Plex 5900 Card-Connected access control product that integrates with PACS to offer more access points, at approximately half the cost of wired doors, because there are no wires, no wireless RF infrastructure, and no IP connections required for the additional card-connected access points.

Association Sponsor

Kantara InitiativePO Box 672

Williamstown MA 01267

kantarainitiative.org

Mission: To foster identity community harmonization, interoperability, innovation, and broad adoption through the development of open identity specifications, operational frameworks, education programs, deployment and usage best practices for privacy-respecting, secure access to online services.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

36 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Booth 303, Silver Sponsor

L-1 Identity Solutions 296 Concord Rd 3rd Flr

Billerica MA 01821

www.L1ID.com

L-1 Identity Solutions, Inc. is the trusted provider of technology, products, systems, solutions, and services that protect and secure personal identities and assets. We remain at the forefront of technology innovation through strong organic growth and strategic acquisitions. Together our businesses deliver the full range of offerings required for solving complex problems associated with managing identities for worldwide government agencies, law enforcement, border management, military branches and commercial businesses.

Booth 207

LaserCard Corporation 1875 N Shoreline Blvd.

Mountain View CA 94043

www.lasercard.com

LaserCard Corporation is a leading provider of secure identity (ID) solutions and services worldwide. The company’s advanced credential solutions enable governments to protect their citizens, borders and services and commercial enterprises to safeguard their employees and assets. In collaboration with industry peers, LaserCard delivers innovative, technology-inclusive solutions that meet the increasingly complex requirements of large-scale ID credential programs. The company integrates technologies including optical memory, microprocessor chips, RFID tags, biometrics, security features, special materials and durable credential construction to provide maximum security for its customers.

Booth 101

Lenel, a UTC Fire & Security Co. 1212 Pittsford Victor Rd

Pittsford NY 14534

www.lenel.com

Lenel is a leading provider of software and integrated systems for government security markets. Lenel’s flagship security platform, OnGuard®, provides an open system that seamlessly connects all the key elements of the security management puzzle across the global enterprise. Lenel’s award-winning product portfolio is a comprehensive yet ever-expanding suite of applications, encompassing access control, alarm monitoring, credential management, intrusion detection, asset tracking, digital video surveillance and management, visitor management, remote administration, IT security, biometrics, mobile enterprise, intelligent video and smart card functionality. SkyPoint is a comprehensive IP video surveillance control and management solution. SkyPoint, Lenel’s IP Video Control platform, is designed to operate on a single platform.

Booth 113

MELZER maschinenbau GmbH Ruhrstrasse 51-55

Schwelm 58332 Germany

www.MelzerGmbH.com

MELZER is the leading equipment supplier for the industrial production of state-of-the-art MRTD's, ID Cards, Smart Cards, Contactless Cards and RFID Inlays. Customized solutions in combination with the unique modular inline production processes ensure highest productivity, flexibility and security at a maximum yield. The Melzer product portfolio also includes advanced RFID converting equipment for the production of Smart Labels, Smart Tickets and Luggage Tags.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 37

Booth 112

Morpho Station Square III Ste 201

Paoli PA 19301

www.morpho.com

Morpho, a high-technology company in the Safran group, is one of the world's leading suppliers of identification, detection and e-document solutions. Morpho is specialized in personal rights and flow management applications, in particular based on biometrics, a sector in which it is the world leader, as well as secure terminals and smart cards. Morpho's integrated systems and equipment are deployed worldwide and contribute to the safety and security of transportation, data, people and countries. Morpho e-Document’s portfolio includes hardware, PIV cards, software, consulting and services, all focused on smart cards for the benefit of consumers and providers in thetelecommunications, health, identification and banking areas.

Booth 402, Track 1 Thu Sponsor

MorphoTrak 113 Columbus St Ste 400

Alexandria VA 22314

www.morphotrak.com

MorphoTrak, a subsidiary of SAFRAN USA, provides biometric and identity management solutions to the U.S. and Canada. Formed from the merger of Sagem Morpho and Motorola's biometric division, MorphoTrak serves the needs of facility/IT security, access control, civil identification, law enforcement, and border control. MorphoTrak and its global parent--Morpho--are leading innovators in identification technologies such as smart cards, secure documents, e-passports, and driver licenses, as well as large fingerprint identification systems, facial and iris recognition. Headquartered near Washington D.C., MorphoTrak employs over 450 persons.

Booth 512

Muhlbauer Inc.226 Pickett`s Line

Newport News VA 23603-1366

www.muhlbauer.com

The Mühlbauer Group is the only one-stop-shop technology partner for the card, Smart Card, passport/ePassport and RFID industry. With nearly 2,000 employees, technology centers in Germany, Malaysia, the U.S. and Slovakia, and a worldwide sales and service network, the Mühlbauer Group is the world’s market leader in innovative systems and software solutions for the production and personalization of cards, passports and RFID applications. Mühlbauer also develops and produces innovative systems such as micro-chip die sorting, flexible solar cells or carrier tape equipment for specific niche applications. Mühlbauer’s Precision Parts and Systems segment produces high precision components both for the manufacturing of its own products and to other manufacturers in sensitive industries such as aerospace, motorsports, medical and semiconductor industry.

Association Sponsor

NFC Forum401 Edgewater Pl Ste 600

Wakefield MA 01880

www.nfc-forum.org

The NFC Forum, www.nfc-forum.org, was formed to advance the use of Near Field Communication technology by developing specifications, ensuring interoperability among devices and services, and educating the market about NFC technology. Formed in 2004, the Forum now has 140+ members. Manufacturers, applications developers, financial services institutions, and more all work together to promote the use of NFC technology in consumer electronics, mobile devices, and PCs.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

38 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Media Sponsor

The Nilson Report 1110 Eugenia Pl Ste 100

Carpinteria CA 93013

www.nilsonreport.com

For 39 years The Nilson Report has been the world’s leading source of news and proprietary research on consumer payment systems. Published 23 times a year, the twelve-page newsletter, provides readers in 85 countries with statistics available from no other source and tightly edited articles that deliver a maximum amount of data in a minimum amount of time.

Booth 306, Wed AM Break Sponsor

NXP Semiconductors 1109 Mckay Dr

San Jose CA 95131-1706

www.nxp.com

Leading chip solutions for the global identification market. With over 4 billion contactless chips sold to date, NXP Semiconductors is the world’s leader in the design and manufacturing of ICs powering secure smart cards, electronic identification documents and the corresponding reader components. NXP's secure contactless technology is used in eGovernment, access management, banking, loyalty programs, ticketing and public transport – to provide consumers with greater convenience and safety. NXP holds a share of over 80 percent in the global ePassports chip market, supplying 68 out of 76 national roll-outs, including the US, Germany, Republic of China and Singapore as well as more than 80% for ePassport reader chip solutions.

Booth 203, Badge Sponsor

Oberthur Technologies of America Corp. 3150 E. Ana St.

Rancho Dominguez CA 90221

www.oberthurcs.com

Oberthur Technologies is the leading provider of smart card-based solutions and personalization services for the United States Federal Government. As the #1 provider of HSPD-12 PIV cards since the implantation of the directive in 2006, Oberthur is well known for

product innovation and solution-based systems. Beyond card manufacturing and personalization, Oberthur provides secure document enrollment, document issuance, authentication tools and workflow. Oberthur’s FIPS 201 validated ID-One PIV is the first card listed on the GSA Approved Products List that offers SP800-73-3 new features like Key History, Elliptic Curve Cryptography as well as On-Card Fingerprint Verification.

Association Sponsor

Online Trust AlliancePO Box 803

Bellevue, WA 98009-0803

otalliance.org

OTA's mission is to create an online trust community, promoting business practices and technologies to enhance consumer trust and the vitality of interactive marketing , ecommerce, governmental and online financial services. OTA is the only global organization which represents the broad internet ecosystem supporting user choice and control, protection of critical infrastructure, privacy and data governance, promoting marketing best practices, balanced legislation, benchmark reporting, and self-governance.

Booth 507

Precise Biometrics8300 Boone Blvd, Ste 500

Vienna VA 22182

www.precisebiometrics.com

Precise Biometrics is a market-leading provider of solutions for fingerprint recognition to prove people's identities. With top-of-the-line expertise in fingerprint verification, Precise Biometrics offers fast, accurate and secure authentication of a person. Its core product, Precise Match-on-Card™, adds value to ID, SIM, enterprise and bank cards as well as systems for access control to buildings, computers and networks. Precise Biometrics serves business and government organizations throughout the world and its technology is licensed to close to 100 million users.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 39

Media Sponsor

RFID Switchboard 1320 Fenwick Ln Ste 301

Silver Spring MD 20910

www.rfidsb.com

Switchboard Media is a company producing top quality information products, which prides itself on the finest content, editing and organization in their marketplace. Besides RFID Switchboard, offerings include customized technology marketing campaigns and channel partner programs; webinars and case studies; and sponsor-supported publications.

Booth 307, Reception Beverage Sponsor, Wed PM Break Sponsor

SafeNet 4690 Millenium Dr.

Belcamp MD 21017

www.safenet-inc.com/government

SafeNet is the global leader in information security. Founded 25 years ago, SafeNet’s extensive range of security products provides NSA-certified and NIST-certified solutions consist of Type 1(classified) and Type 3 (CUI) encryption and authentication solutions to protect communications, sensitive and classified data, intellectual property, and digital identities. The information contained in this electronic mail transmission may be privileged and confidential, and therefore, protected from disclosure. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately by replying to this message and deleting it from your computer without copying or disclosing it.

Media Sponsor

Security Magazine 2401 W Big Beaver Rd

Troy MI 48084

www.securitymagazine.com

Security magazine focuses on ways to apply technology and services to solve security problems. Security magazine guarantees 35,000 security end-user and integrator subscribers in government, healthcare, education, airports, seaports, transportation distribution, utilities, retail, industrial, financial, hospitality / entertainment, military, law enforcement

and other markets. Security magazine guarantees the most BPA-reported subscribers in all the 7 fastest-growing market segments than any other security end-user publication.

Media Sponsor

SecurityInfoWatch.com 12735 Morris Rd, Deerfield Pt Bldg 200 Ste 180

Alpharetta GA 30004

www.securityinfowatch.com

Launched in September 2004, SecurityInfoWatch.com is providing the security community with a comprehensive clearinghouse of industry news, data and analysis...we establish ourselves as...the Complete Information Source for the Security Industry. Key to serving the industry is providing sections specifically tailored to meet the needs of security professionals, dealers and distributors, systems integrators, and manufacturers. Additionally, the site features more than 20 sections covering the latest updates on both core industry verticals and product categories.

Media Sponsor

SecurityStockWatch.com 3 Rye Ridge Plaza Ste 187

Rye Brook NY 10573

www.SecurityStockWatch.com

www.SecurityStockWatch.com …as the #1 Google site for “secure ID solutions” and “fraud prevention solutions” we reach your customers and target markets. What’s YOUR solution? Based on our demographics, our channel offers your company an excellent awareness, branding, marketing, and lead generation opportunity. Let us customize a high ROI campaign for your solution. Contact: [email protected].

Booth 500, Association Sponsor

Smart Card Alliance191 Clarksville Rd

Princeton Junction NJ 08550 www.smartcardalliance.org

The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the

www.SmartCardAlliance.org • 1-800-556-6828

Smart Card Alliance2011 Annual ConferenceMay 2 – 5 • Chicago, IllinoisHyatt Regency McCormick Place

The 2011 Smart Card Alliance Annual Conference heads to the exciting Mid West this year – to Chicago and the Hyatt Regency McCormick Place, May 2 - 5, 2011.

2011 is expected to be a breakthrough year for the smart card industry as the � rst EMV payment cards reach the marketplace in the United States; joining Canada, Latin America, and the rest of the global pay-ments market in the adoption of the EMV global payments standard. In addition, exciting changes are taking place in the identity and security markets as cybersecurity becomes the focus of a national strategy and standards based secure ID cards rapidly expand into the healthcare markets, government eCommerce, and commercial enterprise physical and logical security.

Join us for what the Smart Card Alliance does best – bringing experi-enced smart card practitioners and suppliers together with innovative solutions developers and end users across the payments and security markets. Network and share information on smart card-based identity management and authentication for the payments and security markets. Come and enjoy the best that the smart card industry has to o� er.

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 41

understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology. The Alliance invests heavily in education on the appropriate uses of technology for identification, payment and other applications and strongly advocates the use of smart card technology in a way that protects privacy and enhances data security and integrity. Through specific projects such as education programs, market research, advocacy, industry relations and open forums, the Alliance keeps its members connected to industry leaders and innovative thought. The Alliance is the single industry voice for smart card technology, leading industry discussion on the impact and value of smart cards in the US and Latin America.

Media Sponsor

Smart Cards Trends 11 rue de l'Elizée

La Falaise 78410 France

www.smartcardstrends.com

SmartCardsTrends is a 24-page newsletter dedicated to SmartCards, SmartObjects, Trusted devices & softwares and secure platforms. This publication bringscritical information on technologies and strategies to smart security industry, application developpers and service providers in the fields of telecommunications, banking, e-government, health, transportation and IT security. 7 Issues/year. Editor-Publisher: Yvon Avenel. Associated Editor: Olivier Trébucq. SmartCards e-News is an email publication devoted to bringing the latest news from the Smart Security industry. It is published free of charge to subscribed readers. http://www.smartcardstrends.com. Daily news- Editor-Publisher: Yvon Avenel.

Booth 503

Smartmatic 1001 Broken Sound Pkwy

Boca Raton FL 33487

www.smartmatic.com

Smartmatic is a privately-owned, multinational company that designs and deploys end-to-end, custom technology solutions to enable government agencies and large enterprises to fulfill their missions with the utmost efficiency. Founded around a team of elite engineers who are guided by the principle of continuous improvement in process, performance and

results, Smartmatic delivers unsurpassed technology to clients in key business divisions: Electronic and auditable voting systems; Intelligent and integrated security systems; Identity registration and authentication of large population groups. Our concentration on these business areas over several years has given us competitive advantage and insight in each field.

Booth 310

SMARTRAC Technology Group 1546 Lake Dr West

Chanhassen MN 55317

www.smartrac-group.com

SMARTRAC is the global leader in high-quality RFID inlays for e-Passports, e-Payment as well as for RFID transponders for public transportation applications. The company produces ready-made as well as customized transponders for public transport, access control, RFID-based car immobilizers, animal identification, libraries, industry, and logistics in all current frequency standards. SMARTRAC was founded in 2000 and since going public in July 2006 has been trading as a stock corporation under Dutch law with its registered headquarters in Amsterdam. The company currently employs some 3.300 employees and maintains a global research and development, production and sales network.

Booth 208

Software House6 Technology Park Dr

Westford MA 01886

www.swhouse.com

Software House, a Tyco International Company, manufactures security and event management systems including the innovative C•CURE 9000 and the flagship C•CURE 800/8000. Combined with a suite of reliable controllers lead by the iSTAR Edge IP door control module, Software House technologies are among the most powerful in the industry. Add an unsurpassed integration platform that allows customers to integrate seamlessly with critical business applications, and it’s easy to see why Software House solutions are ideal for security-critical applications. For

EXHIBITORS & SPONSORS

42 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

more information, visit www.swhouse.com.

Booth 406

Teslin® Substrate by PPG Industries 440 College Park Dr

Monroeville PA 15146

www.teslin.com

Delivering top security, unrivaled durability, enhanced IC functionality AND reduced program costs, Teslin® substrate is used worldwide for billions of security cards and documents. Offering a key first line of defense in keeping critical credentials secure, easy-to-print Teslin substrate is compatible with a variety of security printing processes. Compared to 100% polycarbonate cards, lab tests show that cards using Teslin substrate are more flex durable and more resistant to tampering through mechanical delamination. In addition to a security-grade product supporting advanced authentication methods, a biodegradable grade and 4 mil/102 micron grade material are now available to expand card design options.

Booth 313, Reception Beverage Sponsor

XTec Inc. 11180 Sunrise Valley Dr Ste 310

Reston VA 20191

www.xtec.com

XTec is a leader in secure, interoperable authentication and verification systems. XTec develops, produces, and licenses enterprise level security solutions for

Credentialing, Access Control, Information Systems, and Electronic Commerce for government and commercial uses. XTec's focus is on providing a secure foundation from which customers can build secure enterprise web-based applications and cryptographic systems. XTec was one of the first companies to be certified by GSA as an "End-to-End" FIPS 201 solution provider. XTec is a recognized leader in both government and commercial circles for its expertise and products for credentialing, identity, secure payment, and access control. For more information about XTec, visit our Web site http://www.xtec.com.

Booth 506

Zebra Technologies Corp. 333 Corporate Woods Parkway

Vernon Hills IL 60061-3109

www.zebra.com

Fortify your information and security with Zebra printer solutions with a wide range of security features and RFID encoding. Use Zebra Security ID card printers to create ID badges, Driver’s Licenses and Access Cards. Zebra card printers offer security features for all components of a security card system–including cards, print ribbons, laminates, printers and software printer drivers. Tamper-evident labels with overt, covert, and forensic security features assure long lasting, tamper resistant identification cards that are difficult to counterfeit. To learn more got to www.zebra.com or follow our blog at blogs.zebra.com.

As the first and continued provider of Smart Cards for the Common Access Card program, Oberthur looks forward to the next 10 years as a proven and trusted partner to the DMDC.

SMART CARD ALLIANCE INFO

44 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Identity, Security & Healthcare • November 16-19, 2010

Leadership Council Member Organizations

SMART CARD ALLIANCE INFO

Walter E. Washington Convention Center • Washington, D.C. 45

Smart Card Alliance Membership List

General Members ACS Government Solutions ACT Canada ActivIdentity AMAG Technology, Inc. American Express Apriva Athena Smartcard Solutions Inc. atsec Information Security Blackboard Inc. Capgemini USA Inc Capital One CASSIS Americas, Inc CertiPath LLC Chase Card Services Codebench, Inc. Cogent Systems Collis America, Inc. Computer Sciences Corp (CSC) CPI Card Group Cryptography Research, Inc. Cubic Transportation Systems, Inc. Datacard Group DeviceFidelity, Inc Diebold Security DVN (Holdings) Ltd. ENTRUST epay North America ERG - USA Exponent, Inc. Fare Logistics Corp. FIME Fiserv Health Plan Systems, Inc Heartland Payment Systems Hewlett-Packard Enterprise Services Honeywell ICMA Identicard Systems, Inc. Identification Technology Partners, Inc. Ingersoll Rand Security Technologies JCB International Credit Card Co., Ltd L-1 Identity Solutions LaserCard Corporation Lenel Systems International LoyaltyOne Inc. LTK Engineering Services MAGICARD - Ultra Electronics Morpho Multos International NACHA - The Electronic Payment

Association Nagra ID Security NBS Technologies, Inc.

NXP Semiconductors OTI America Parkeon Incorporated PPG Industries, Inc. Probaris, Inc Ready Credit Corporation SafeNet, Inc Scheidt & Bachmann USA SCM Microsystems, Inc. Shane-Gelling Company Smartrac Technology STMicroelectronics Thales Verifone Vivotech, Inc. Watchdata Technologies Pte Ltd Xtec, Inc

Government Chicago Transit Authority Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) Defense Manpower Data Center Department of Homeland Security Federal Aviation Admin/Internal

Security General Services Administration Metrolinx Metropolitan Transportation

Commission MTA New York City Transit NASA National Institute of Standards and

Technology Port Authority of NY/NJ Regional Transportation Authority Southeastern Pennsylvania

Transportation Authority (SEPTA) The Utah Transit Authority TransitCenter, Inc. U.S. Department of State US Department of

Transportation/Volpe Center US Government Printing Office US Senate Sergeant at Arms US Treasury FMS Washington Metropolitan Area Transit

Authority (WMATA)

University Georgetown University - UIS -

Facilities & Safety Control Systems Mount Sinai Medical Center

Associate Double Diamond Group Homeland Security Consultants, LLC IDmachines LLC IQ Devices JC Simonetti & Associates, Inc. Keville Enterprises, Inc LF Consulting Organization Change Future

Workplace, LLC Raak Technologies Roger Roehr Smartcard Marketing Solutions Starchip Vision In Action Corp.

Latin America Chapter American Banknote S.A. Autoridad Nacional Para La Innovacion

Gubernamental (AIG) Banrisul S.A. Fundacion Instituto de Ingeneria GDBURTI-G&D Brazil Gemalto Global Enterprise Technologies Corp

(GET Group) HID Global HSBC Bank Panama Instituto Nacional De Tecnologia Da

Informacao - ITI Inter American Development Bank LaserCard Corporation Latin American Security Association

(ALAS) Morpho Oberthur Card Systems Oficina Nacional de Tecnologias de Informacion (ONTI) Pandaid Soluciones C.A. Procesos Automatizados, S.A. DE C.V. Redeban Multicolor S.A. Sertracen Telered, S.A. Ultra Electronics Card Systems Inc. Visa International

Payments Council

The Smart Card Alliance Payments Council focuses on facilitating the adoption of chip-enabled payments and payment applications in the U.S. through education programs for consumers, merchants, issuers, acquirers/processors, government regulators, mobile telecommunications providers and payments service providers. The group is bringing together payments industry stakeholders, including payments industry leaders, merchants and suppliers, and is working on projects related to implementing EMV, contactless payments, NFC-enabled payments and applications, mobile payments, and chip-enabled e-commerce. The Council’s primary goal is to inform and educate the market about the value of chip-enabled payments in improving the security of the payments infrastructure and in enhancing the value of payments and payment-related applications for industry stakeholders.

Payments Council Activities

The Council works on projects to provide educational resources and define best practices for chip-enabled payments implementations and to explore new chip-enabled payment applications. Council activities include:

Developing white papers and hosting web seminars and • conference workshops on chip-enabled payments to provide educational resources to the industry.Developing industry positions on key issues in deploying • chip-enabled payments and collaborating as an industry to address challenges.Maintaining an active, public voice on chip-enabled • payments topics, serving as a resource for authoritative information and responding to reports that contain misinformation about the technology.Developing educational material and guidance on the use • of EMV and chip-enabled solutions to address fraud and counterfeit cards in the U.S. payments industry. Developing educational material and guidance on the use • of Near Field Communication (NFC) technology for mobile contactless payments

The Payments Council has also created a Merchant Advisory Group to collaborate at the industry level on issues and topics related to merchant acceptance of chip-enabled payments. The Council’s goal in working with the Advisory Group is to engage in cross-industry discussion on payment issues and to determine what the industry can do to make chip-enabled payments deployment faster and easier. Current Merchant Advisory Group members include: Arby’s, Petro Canada, Racetrac and Sheetz.

Council Resources

EventsNFC/Mobile Payments Workshop• Payment Summit• Roundtable discussions with the Merchant Advisory Group• Top 10 Reasons U.S. Should Consider EMV webinar• Web seminar series produced in partnership with ETA•

White Papers and ResourcesAccepting Contactless Payments: A Merchant Guide• Chip-Enabled Mobile Marketing• Contactless Payments: Consumer Attitudes and Acceptance • in the United StatesContactless Payments: Delivering Merchant and Consumer • BenefitsContactless Payments: Frequently Asked Questions• Contactless Payments: Merchant ROI Model• EMV Chip Cards Expected for Upscale U.S. Cardholders• End-to-End Encryption and Chip Cards in the U.S. Payments • IndustryFraud in the U.S. Payments Industry: Fraud Mitigation and • Prevention Measures in Use and Chip Card Technology Impact on FraudIndustry resource web pages on EMV and NFC• Issuer and Merchant Best Practices: Promoting Contactless • Payments Usage and AcceptanceProximity Mobile Payments: Leveraging NFC and the • Contactless Financial Payments InfrastructureProximity Mobile Payments Business Scenarios: Research • Report on Stakeholder PerspectivesSecurity of Proximity Mobile Payments• Smart Card Alliance Contactless Payment Security Statement • and Q&ASmart.Payments LinkedIn Group• What Makes a Smart Card Secure?• The What, Who and Why of Contactless Payments•

The Council also has active collaboration and relationships with the Electronic Transactions Association (ETA), Merchant Advisory Group (MAG), National Retail Federation, NFC Forum and NACHA.

Payments Council Resources can be found at http://www.smartcardalliance.org/pages/activities-councils-payments

Fall 2010

Council OfficersCo-chairs: Simon Hurry, Visa and Oliver Manahan, MasterCardVice chair: Troy Bernard, Discover Financial Services Secretary: Deborah Baxley, Capgemini

Council Steering CommitteeDeborah Baxley, CapgeminiTroy Bernard, Discover Financial ServicesJo Ann Davaris, American ExpressJason Dell, First Data CorporationWilly Dommen, Booz Allen HamiltonMichael English, Heartland Payment SystemsSimon Hurry, Visa, Inc.Jack Jania, GemaltoMohammad Khan, ViVOtechPaul Legacki, Infineon TechnologiesMichelle Lehouck, CPI Card GroupDan Loomis, VeriFoneOliver Manahan, MasterCard WorldwideRon Pinkus, G&DDori Skelding, Chase Card ServicesGarfield Smith, Oberthur TechnologiesCharles Walton, INSIDE Contactless

Council MembersAccenture American ExpressAprivaBooz Allen HamiltonCapgeminiCapital OneCASSIS Americas, Inc.Chase Card ServicesCollis AmericaComputer Sciences Corp. (CSC)CPI Card GroupDatacard GroupDeviceFidelity, Inc.Discover Financial ServicesDouble Diamond Groupepay North AmericaFirst Data CorporationFiServGemaltoGiesecke & DevrientHeartland Payment SystemsHID GlobalHPIBMInfineon TechnologiesINSIDE ContactlessJCB International Credit Card Co., Ltd.LoyaltyOne, Inc.MasterCard WorldwideMorphoMTA New York City TransitMultos InternationalNACHA -- The Electronic Payment AssociationNagra ID SecurityNXP SemiconductorsOberthur TechnologiesOTI AmericaScheidt & BachmannSCM MicrosystemsSmartcard Marketing SolutionsSTMicroelectronicsThales GroupUbiq, Inc.VeriFoneVisa Inc.ViVOtechWatchdata Technologies

About the Smart Card Alliance

The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology. Through specific projects such as education programs, market research, advocacy, industry relations and open forums, the Alliance keeps its members connected to industry leaders and innovative thought. The Alliance is the single industry voice for smart cards, leading industry discussion on the impact and value of smart cards in the U.S. and Latin America. For more information please visit www.smartcardalliance.org.

The Smart Card Alliance Industry and Technology Councils are focused groups within the overall structure of the Alliance. Councils have been created to foster increased industry collaboration within a specified industry or market segment and produce tangible results, speeding smart card adoption and industry growth. Groups collaborate on specific deliverables, including reports, briefings and educational material. The Smart Card Alliance currently has five active Councils focusing on contactless and mobile payments, healthcare, identity, physical access and transportation industries. Council participation is open to any Smart Card Alliance member who wishes to contribute to the Council projects.

Member Comments

“IBM’s participation in the Smart Card Alliance Steering Committee and various councils has provided us an invaluable opportunity to interact with our partners in the payments industry. It offers a forum for cutting-edge thought leadership, business insights, and technology development that is clearly shaping the direction of the industry. Together, we will revolutionize the smart card arena.”

—Sri Chawla, Business Development, IBM Payments Practice

“The Smart Card Alliance provides Visa with valuable research and first-hand information on trends and directions in the smart card and mobile payments space. The Alliance work on new developments in chip cards and authentication makes the organization an invaluable source of current and relevant market intelligence.”

—Simon Hurry, Sr. Business Leader, Visa Inc.

“The Smart Card Alliance is a neutral forum of industry leaders that addresses core-level issues that touch industry participants across the board. Considering that Alliance activities are expanding, it was a great idea to start a Contactless and Mobile Payments Council to focus on addressing the core issues for the wider acceptance of contactless payments and on the emerging market for NFC mobile payments. The Alliance and Contactless and Mobile Payments Council produce white papers, position papers, webinars, and focused task forces to make the contactless roll out smoother and more successful. This provides a direct value to ViVOtech.”

—Mohammad Khan, President and Founder,ViVOtech

“The Smart Card Alliance Contactless Payments Council has provided an opportunity for Giesecke & Devrient to interact with decision makers in the industry ecosystem, including financial institutions, payment brands, and component and device suppliers. G&D has participated in the creation of key Alliance white papers, a valuable tool in moving the contactless payments industry forward.”

—Heather Klein, Director, Marketing Communications, Giesecke & Devrient

“First Data is always looking for ways to stay on top of trends in the payments industry. The Smart Card Alliance provides a great forum for First Data to interact with payments industry leaders who share a common interest in promoting contactless and mobile payment solutions.”

—Roger Musfeldt, Director Mobile Solutions, First Data

“Participation in the Contactless Payments Council enables member companies to directly tackle the challenges which face our industry. Without effectively run industry groups like the Council, members would be individually trying to overcome issues which are greater than our respective companies. However, the collaborative efforts of the Council have enabled tangible advances to occur through informative white papers, thought-provoking conferences and responsive PR.” —GarfieldSmith,VicePresident,Marketing,OberthurTechnologies

“Through its Industry Councils, the Smart Card Alliance has provided INSIDE Contactless with a unique opportunity to network with the key stakeholders in the important markets we serve, including contactless and mobile payments, identity, physical access and transportation. The Alliance’s efforts toward educating these markets through its publication of white papers, FAQs and other materials and effectively communicating with the media has been invaluable to INSIDE and other ecosystem stakeholders as we continue to push the edge of the technology envelope and bring exciting new solutions to market.”

—Charles Walton, EVP Payments, INSIDE Contactless

Physical Access Council

Physical Access Council Resources can be found at www.smartcardalliance.org/pages/activities-councils-physical-access

Fall 2010

The Smart Card Alliance Physical Access Council is focused on accelerating the widespread acceptance, usage, and application of smart card technology for physical access control. The group brings together, in an open forum, leading users and technologists from both the public and private sectors and works on activities that are important to the physical access industry and that will help speed smart card adoption in this important market.

Physical Access Council Activities

The Council works on projects to stimulate the use of smart card technology for physical access control. The Physical Access Council’s activities include:

Developing white papers and briefings on best practices for • using smart card technology for physical access control;

Providing industry resources to assist the Federal • government, state and local organizations, and enterprises in the implementation of FIPS 201 Personal Identity Verification (PIV) cards and PIV interoperable cards for physical access control;

Participating in the development of standards and • specifications for using smart cards in physical access control systems;

Collaborating with other industry organizations to influence • standards and develop best practices.

Council Officers

Chair: Lars Suneborn, Hirsch ElectronicsVice Chair: David Nichols, HID GlobalSecretary: Salvatore D’Agostino, IDmachines

Council Resources

Events

PIV-I Credentialing Workshop: Strategies for the • Implementation of PIV-I Secure Identity Credentials, 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Conference

Government Smart Card Interagency Advisory Board (IAB) • breakout sessions

White Papers

Authentication Mechanisms for Physical Access Control •

Considerations for the Migration of Existing Physical Access • Control Systems to Achieve FIPS 201 Compatibility

Federal Identity, Credential and Access Management (FICAM) • Roadmap and Implementation Guidance Summary

FIPS 201 PIV II Card Use with Physical Access Control • Systems: Recommendations to Optimize Transaction Time and User Experience

FIPS 201 and Physical Access Control: An Overview of the • Impact of FIPS 201 on Federal Physical Access Control Systems

Interoperable Identity Credentials for the Air Transport • Industry

Physical Access Control System Migration Options for Using • FIPS 201-1 Compliant Credentials, developed in collaboration with the OSE, SIA and IBIA

Recommendation for PIV Test Card Suite for Negative Test • Cases

Recommendation on the Credential Numbering Scheme for • the FIPS 201 PIV Card Global Unique Identifier

Industry Collaboration and Commentary

Collaboration with the International Biometric Industry • Association (IBIA) and Security Industry Association (SIA)

Submission of industry comments and recommendations on • the development the FICAM Roadmap and Guidance, Part B

Submission of industry comments on FIPS 201•

Submission of industry comments on NIST draft FIPS 140-3, • Security Requirements for Cryptographic Modules

Submission of industry comments on the FIPS 201 Evaluation • Program

Submission of industry comments on NIST draft SP 800-73-3, • Interfaces for Personal Identity Verification

The Council also collaborated with the Smart Card Alliance Identity Council on a white paper on PIV interoperable cards for non-federal issuers and on comments on the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC).

About the Smart Card Alliance

The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology. Through specific projects such as education programs, market research, advocacy, industry relations and open forums, the Alliance keeps its members connected to industry leaders and innovative thought. The Alliance is the single industry voice for smart cards, leading industry discussion on the impact and value of smart cards in the U.S. and Latin America. For more information please visit www.smartcardalliance.org.

The Smart Card Alliance Industry and Technology Councils are focused groups within the overall structure of the Alliance. Councils have been created to foster increased industry collaboration within a specified industry or market segment and produce tangible results, speeding smart card adoption and industry growth. Groups collaborate on specific deliverables, including reports, briefings and educational material. The Smart Card Alliance currently has five active Councils focusing on contactless and mobile payments, healthcare, identity, physical access and transportation industries. Council participation is open to any Smart Card Alliance member who wishes to contribute to the Council projects.

Council Steering CommitteeSalvatore D’Agostino, IDmachines Tony Ferguson, Bioscrypt / L-1 Enterprise Access DivisionBob Gilson, Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC) Walter Hamilton, Identification Technology PartnersKevin Kozlowski, XTec, Inc.Lolie Kull, HP Bob Merkert, SCM MicrosystemsDavid Nichols, HID GlobalSteve Rogers, Intellisoft, Inc.Adam Shane, AMAG TechnologyMike Sulak, Department of StateLars Suneborn, Hirsch Electronics

Council MembersAMAG TechnologyASSA ABLOY ITGAthena Smartcard SolutionsBioscrypt / L-1 Enterprise Access DivisionBooz Allen HamiltonCardLogixCertiPath LLCCogent SystemsComputer Sciences Corp. (CSC)Cubic Transportation SystemsDatawatch SystemsDefense Manpower Data Center (DMDC)DeloitteDiebold SecurityGemaltoGeneral Services AdministrationGiesecke & DevrientHID Global CorporationHirsch ElectronicsHoneywellHPIBMIdentification Technology PartnersIDmachinesIndalaInfogardIntellisoft, Inc.L-1 Identity SolutionsLenel Systems InternationalLockheed MartinMAGICARD - Ultra ElectronicsMorphoNagra ID SecurityNASANBS TechnologiesNorthrop Grumman CorporationNXP SemiconductorsOberthur TechnologiesOrganization Change Future Workplace, LLCProbarisRoehr ConsultingSAICSCM MicrosystemsShane Gelling EngineeringTyco InternationalUnisysU.S. Department of DefenseU.S. Department of Homeland SecurityU.S. Department of StateU.S. Department of TransportationXTec, Incorporated

Member Comments

“The Smart Card Alliance is an important common interest forum that enables thesmart card industry to respond effectively to important issues that affect its members. The Alliance provides a respected voice to help educate organizations and policy makers on the advantages of smart card technology and to help guide future adoption.” —PaulCollier,President,IdentificationTechnologyPartners

“The Physical Access Council provides a unique resource for the discovery, discussion, and dissemination of the issues that drive the physical access control system (PACS) marketplace. Companies and individuals need to continue to evaluate where to spend their resources among the competing organizations, web sites, meetings and other sales and educational opportuni-ties. For IDmachines it is an easy decision to continue to invest in a close involvement with the Council’s activities. Frankly it is great to get together on a regular basis with people who un-derstand the intricacies and evolution of a modern PACS as well as the realities of the business. As a result the Physical Access Council represents, in my opinion, one of, if not the industry’s most important working group. Simply look at the council’s output over the last few years if there is any question about this claim.”

—Salvatore D’Agostino, CEO, IDmachines

“The Smart Card Alliance Physical Access Council has been a very valuable source of current and relevant information regarding technology trends and government and industry initiatives and also serves as a forum to provide input, share views and help influence the future of our industry. It provides a view of things to come which helps tremendously in planning and solu-tions development.” —TonyDamalas,VicePresidentTechnology,DieboldSecurity

“The Smart Card Alliance has provided me with knowledge that has helped me succeedwith my previous jobs as a Federal Government employee and now as a contractor. My job within the Federal Government and now would have been much more difficult without the Smart Card Alliance.”

—Lolie Kull, U.S. Government Solutions, HP Enterprise Services

“The Smart Card Alliance is an invaluable resource for professionals working in smart card technology within the federal, state and local governments, and health care. We have partici-pated in numerous Alliance conferences and workshops, as well as shared thought leadership with our employees and our clients. All of these outlets have increased our understanding and awareness of the latest advancements in smart card technology and enabled us to better con-nect with our clients who are facing challenges in the identity management arena.”

—Carey Miller, Senior Manager, Security, Privacy and Identity Management Solutions, Deloitte Consulting

“I have been involved with the Physical Access Council since its inception. The Council provides virtually unlimited resources to identify key upcoming industry trends. It also provides end users with important unbiased information that is not influenced by a particular technology or company. We use these resources to educate our customers and to develop forward-thinking solutions that answer the needs of the most demanding security professionals.”

—Roger Roehr, Consultant, Roehr Consulting

“Some of the brightest minds in the industry participate on the Physical Access Council. You get a new appreciation for standards and guidance when they are discussed by such a cross-functional group. With this deeper understanding of the requirements, I am better equipped to educate others.” —AdamShane,ProductManager,AMAGTechnology

The unbiased, collective industry expertise of the Smart Card Alliance continues to, in a leading role, serve both industry as well as government agencies with accurate, current and relevant information necessary to make informed decisions.

—Lars R. Suneborn, Director, Government Program, HIRSCH Electronics

The Smart Card Alliance Identity Council is focused on promoting the need for technologies and usage solutions regarding human identity information to address the challenges of securing identity information and reducing identity fraud, and to help organizations realize the benefits that secure identity information delivers. The Council engages a broad set of participants and takes an industry perspective, bringing careful thought, joint planning, and multiple organization resources to bear on addressing the challenges of securing identity information for proper use.

Identity Council Activities

The Council works on projects to raise awareness of the issues that organizations and the public face in implementing and using identity systems and to promote the use of the appropriate technologies to solve these issues. Council activities include:

Developing white papers and briefings on key identity topics • to provide educational resources to the industry.Developing industry positions on key identity issues and • offering perspectives on solutions.Maintaining an active, public voice on identity topics, • promoting the positive aspects of identity technology solutions and responding to reports that contain misinformation about identity technology.

Council Resources

EventsPIV-I Credentialing Workshop: Strategies for the • Implementation of PIV-I Secure Identity Credentials, 9th Annual Smart Cards in Government Conference

Position PapersAssurance Levels Overview and Recommendations • The Consequences to Citizen Privacy and National Security • in Adopting RFID Technology for Border Crossing Identity DocumentsDepartment of Homeland Security and State Pilots for • Enhanced Driver’s Licenses: Concerns about Privacy, Security and Operational Impact of Technology SelectionEffective Healthcare Identity Management: A Necessary First • Step for Improving U.S. Healthcare Information Systems, in collaboration with the Healthcare CouncilHealthcare Identity Management: The Foundation for a • Secure and Trusted National Health Information Network, in collaboration with the Healthcare CouncilIdentifiers and Authentication – Smart Credential Choices to • Protect Digital IdentityPrivacy, Identity, and the Use of RFID and RF-Enabled Smart • Card Technology Statement on ePassport Security• Smart Card Technology: The Right Choice for REAL ID• Technology Usage in U.S. Electronic Passports Versus Passport • Cards and EDLs

White PapersBest Practices for the Use of RF-Enabled Technology in • Identity Management

Emergency Response Official Credentials: An Approach to • Attain Trust in Credentials across Multiple Jurisdictions for Disaster RecoveryePassport Frequently Asked Questions• EPC Gen 2 RFID Tags vs. Contactless Smart Cards: Frequently • Asked QuestionsFederal Identity, Credential and Access Management (FICAM) • Roadmap Identity and Smart Card Technology and Application Glossary• Identity Management Systems, Smart Cards and Privacy• Interoperable Identity Credentials for the Air Transport • IndustryLogical Access Security: The Role of Smart Cards in Strong • AuthenticationPrivacy and Secure Identification Systems: The Role of Smart • Cards as a Privacy-Enabling TechnologyRF-Enabled Applications and Technology: Comparing and • Contrasting RFID and RF-Enabled Smart CardsSecure Identification Systems: Building a Chain of Trust• Securing Identity and Enabling Employment Verification: How • Do Immigration Reform and Citizen Identification Align? Smart Cards and Biometrics in a Privacy-Sensitive Secure • Personal Identification System Smart Card Technology in Healthcare: Frequently Asked • Questions, in collaboration with the Healthcare CouncilTop 10 Hot Identity Topics• Using FIPS 201 and the PIV Card for the Corporate Enterprise•

The Identity Council also submitted comments on draft NIST specifications and the draft National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC) and collaborated with the Healthcare and Physical Access Councils on white papers on medical identity theft and PIV interoperable cards for non-federal issuers.

Identity Council Resources can be found at www.smartcardalliance.org/pages/activities-councils-identity

Identity CouncilFall 2010

Council OfficersChair: Harold Kocken, Deloitte Audit and Enterprise Risk ServicesVice Chair: Neville Pattinson, GemaltoSecretary: Salvatore D’Agostino, IDmachines

Council Steering CommitteeSalvatore D’Agostino, IDmachinesRoland Fournier, L-1 Identity SolutionsHarold Kocken, Deloitte Audit and Enterprise Risk ServicesLaChelle LeVan, ProbarisBob Merkert, SCM MicrosystemsNeville Pattinson, GemaltoSteve Rogers, Intellisoft, Inc.James Sheire, NXP SemiconductorsChris Williams, SAIC

Council MembersAccenture Athena SmartcardBooz Allen HamiltonCardLogixCertiPath LLCCogent SystemsComputer Sciences Corp. (CSC)CPI Card GroupCryptography Research, Inc.Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC)DeloitteDiebold SecurityFiservGemaltoGeneral Services AdministrationGiesecke & DevrientHID Global Corp.Hirsch ElectronicsHPIBMIdentification Technology Partners, Inc.IDmachinesInfineon TechnologiesInfogardIntellisoft, Inc.L-1 Identity SolutionsLaserCard CorporationLenel Systems InternationalMAGICARD - Ultra Electronics Multos InternationalNagra ID SecurityNXP SemiconductorsOberthur TechnologiesOrganizational Change Future WorkplaceProbaris, Inc.SAICSCM Microsystems Tyco - Software HouseUnisysU. S. Department of Defense/DMDCU.S. Department of Homeland SecurityVisa CanadaVisa Inc.XTec, Incorporated

About the Smart Card Alliance

The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology. Through specific projects such as education programs, market research, advocacy, industry relations and open forums, the Alliance keeps its members connected to industry leaders and innovative thought. The Alliance is the single industry voice for smart cards, leading industry discussion on the impact and value of smart cards in the U.S. and Latin America. For more information please visit www.smartcardalliance.org.

The Smart Card Alliance Industry and Technology Councils are focused groups within the overall structure of the Alliance. Councils have been created to foster increased industry collaboration within a specified industry or market segment and produce tangible results, speeding smart card adoption and industry growth. Groups collaborate on specific deliverables, including reports, briefings and educational material. The Smart Card Alliance currently has five active Councils focusing on contactless and mobile payments, healthcare, identity, physical access and transportation industries. Council participation is open to any Smart Card Alliance member who wishes to contribute to the Council projects.

Member Comments

“The Alliance is a wonderful place to meet and exchange ideas with industry professionals hav-ing similar interests. The public output from the councils provides benefit to all members andthe industry at large, but there is another whole layer of opportunity that comes with councilparticipation. It is here that small groups with a more narrow focus regularly exchange ideasand strategies to expand the awareness and understanding of smart card technology and ap-plications.” —LindaBrown,BusinessDevelopmentManager,InfineonTechnologies

“IDmachines believes that identity is a cornerstone of the 21st century economy. The evolutionof e-commerce, the mobile workforce, effective logical and physical security and many facetsof our lives all depend on our ability to assert our identity in an efficient, safe and widely-ac-cepted manner. The Smart Card Alliance and the Identity Council represent an opportunity tocollaborate with end-user, consultant, vendor and government organization leaders. It createsthe rare and invigorating opportunity to do well by your enterprise by engaging in importantissues of the day.” —Sal D’Agostino, Principal, IDmachines LLC

“The Smart Card Alliance has done a tremendous amount of work in terms of raising awareness and stimulating thought leadership around smart card technology. Through the events and edu-cation programs, our employees and our clients are better connected to the latest information on issues surrounding smart cards.” —Gordon Hannah, Principal, Deloitte Audit & Enterprise Risk Services “The Smart Card Alliance is a key voice in helping to map the relevance and use of smart cardtechnology in the Americas. Issues such as privacy, interoperability, verification, anti-counter-feiting and security are essential criteria when discussing credential issuance to society andmust be taken with the utmost consideration. Oberthur looks to the Smart Card Alliance as aspokesman for our community and a beacon for policymakers, industry leaders, academics andthe general public for guidance on how to successfully apply such concepts into everyday prac-tice.” —PatrickW.Hearn,VicePresidentGovernmentandIdentificationMarkets- North/CentralAmerica,OberthurTechnologies

“The Smart Card Alliance continues to be a driving force in the high assurance identity and payments marketplace, and through its industry councils is helping address some of the key security and privacy issues in today’s dynamic world. The Identity Council, one of the Alliance’s most prolific, provides expert comment and advice on the pressing and emerging challenges of human identity in the 21st century, ranging from the security of border management to the privacy of electronic health records to the trustworthiness of Internet and mobile commerce. Come join us help shape the future of identity.” —JohnMcKeon,ChiefArchitect,TrustedIdentityInitiative,IBM “For me, one of the most important benefits of the Smart Card Alliance has been for both theindustry and key members of the user community to be able to speak to important issues ofsecurity and privacy with one voice. This has proven very effective in supporting the basicauthentication capability of ePassport, and in educating policy makers and consumers aboutthe differences between secure contactless technology and RFID. Of course the other benefit,as always, is the very active interaction with the user community and in particular those in thefederal government. The Alliance has played an invaluable role in providing a vendor-agnosticplace where industry and government decision makers can work out the practical issues towardscreating interoperable and standards-based solutions for government applications.” —Neville Pattinson, Vice President, Government Affairs and Standards, Gemalto

The Smart Card Alliance Transportation Council is focused on promoting the adoption of interoperable contactless smart card payment systems for transit and other transportation services. Formed in association with the American Public Transportation Association (APTA), the Council is engaged in projects that support applications of smart card use. The overall goal of the Transportation Council is to help accelerate the deployment of standards-based smart card payment programs within the transportation industry.

Council Officers

Chair: Craig Roberts, Utah Transit AuthorityVice Chair - Transit: Gerald Kane, Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA)Vice Chair - Parking: Ian Newberg, ParkeonVice Chair - Tolling: Mike Nash, ACS, A Xerox Company

Transportation Council Activities

Transportation Council activities stimulate the understanding, adoption and widespread acceptance of single and multi-application smart card technology for all transportation-related elements of the marketplace (e.g., mass transit, tolling and parking) by bringing together, in an open environment, leading users and technologists from the public and private sectors to develop concepts and stimulate critical thinking to advance deployments of the technology. The Transportation Council’s activities include:

Enabling targeted smart card demonstrations across • transportation and other industries useful for advancement of technology and applications for smart card-based payments, credentialing, or other appropriate products or services;

Identifying the challenges and opportunities in the • evolving transportation marketplace for multiple smart card applications that can be supported by smart card technology;

Serving as a technical resource for, and participating in the • development of specifications at appropriate national and international - and voluntary - standards for smart card technology which can support multiple user applications in an efficient, secure manner;

Providing educational and research resources for • members, consumers and government organizations to foster deployment of smart cards in the transportation marketplace;

Transportation Council

Participating in other councils sponsored by the Smart • Card Alliance for inter-market cross-over of concepts and technology between the Transportation Council and parallel markets.

Council Resources

Annual Payments Summit meeting, where Alliance members • focus on trends and projects that are accelerating the widespread acceptance, use and application of contactless and mobile technology for transportation applications and retail payments

Co-Branded Multi-Application Contactless Cards for Transit • and Financial Payment

A Guide to Prepaid Cards for Transit Agencies •

Planning for New Fare Payment and Collection Systems: • Cost Considerations and Procurement Guidelines

Serving Unbanked Consumers in the Transit Industry with • Prepaid Cards

Smart Cards and Parking•

Transit and Contactless Financial Payment: New • Opportunities for Collaboration and Convergence

Transit Payment System Security•

Transit and Retail Payment: Opportunities for Collaboration • and Convergence

Transportation Council Resources can be found at www.smartcardalliance.org/pages/activities-councils-transportation

Fall 2010

Council Steering CommitteeDoug Deckert, Booz Allen HamiltonDavid deKozan, CubicMike Dinning, U.S. Dept. of Transportation/ Volpe CenterSteve Frazzini, NYC TransitMargaret Free, Giesecke & DevrientGreg Garback, The Garback GroupJacob Greene, Discover Financial ServicesLinh Huynh, INSIDE ContactlessPaul Korczak, Korczak & AssociatesMichael Laezza, ThalesMike Meringer, VeriFoneMartin Schroeder, APTAEric Reese, Chicago Transit AuthorityFaye Surrette, MasterCard Worldwide

Council MembersAccenture ACS, A Xerox CompanyAmerican ExpressAPTAASSA ABLOY ITGBooz Allen HamiltonCapgeminiCardLogixChase Card ServicesChicago Transit AuthorityCity of Phoenix, Public Transit Dept.Collis AmericaCubic Transportation SystemsDallas Area Rapid Transit (DART)DeloitteDeviceFidelity, Inc.Discover Financial ServicesDouble Diamond Groupepay North AmericaERG - USAFirst Data CorporationGiesecke & DevrientGemaltoHeartland Payment SystemsHID GlobalHPIBMIdentification Technology Partners, Inc.IDmachinesInfineon TechnologiesINSIDE ContactlessJC Simonetti Assoc., Inc.LTK Engineering ServicesLF ConsultingLoyaltyOne, Inc.MasterCard WorldwideMetrolinxMetropolitan Transportation CommissionMTA New York City TransitNXP SemiconductorsOberthur TechnologiesOTI AmericaParkeonPort Authority of NY/NJProbarisRegional Transportation AuthorityScheidt & BachmannSCM MicrosystemsSmartcard Marketing SolutionsSoutheastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA)Thales e-SecurityThales Transportation ServicesTransitCenterU.S. Department of Transportation/Volpe CenterUtah Transit AuthorityVeriFoneVisa Inc.ViVOtechWashington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA)

Member Comments

“It is important for all market participants to understand issues that each face in the use and adoption of contactless technology. The Transportation Council provides a forum for free exchange of ideas, a place to keep abreast of smart card projects in the transportation sector, and a place to talk with other key participants to move implementations forward.”

—Christopher (Chris) C. Cipperly, formerAssistantTreasurer oftheWashingtonMetropolitanAreaTransitAuthority(WMATA)

“The strength of a professional organization lies in the quality and the contribution of the individual members. So, I am looking to see how Booz Allen can contribute to make the Alliance more successful. The Alliance provides a forum for the smart card industry to share ideas and solve problems to allow any industry associated with smart cards to progress, as demonstrated through the formation of the councils. The Alliance and its members provide a repository of smart card information and industry contacts that is frequently referenced during execution of a client assignment.”

—Willy Dommen, Principal, Booz Allen Hamilton

“As measured by its ever increasing membership and spirited, focused participation by representatives from a broad spectrum of interests, the Transportation Council is clearly well-established as a core resource for transit professionals. Its value rests in its membership and their work products, which are at the forefront of innovation, free exchange of ideas and accurate information, and responsiveness to real-world issues that have an immediate effect on business outcomes. This value has been further enhanced by the growing, collaborative efforts with the Contactless Payments Council, which is a natural extension of the broader mission of the Smart Card Alliance as well as testimony to the strength and utility of contactless smart card technology. With the pace of innovation surrounding smart card business applications and technology likely to continue at breakneck speed, I am confident that the contributions of the Council to transit and the business community at large will only increase.”

—Paul Korczak, ConsultantandformerAssistantChiefOfficer ofMetroCardSalesOperations,MTANewYorkCityTransit

“The Transportation Council of the Smart Card Alliance is a vibrant forum for the thought leaders in public transit to discuss issues and opportunities with smart card technologies.” —MichaelNash,VPTransportationTechnology,ACS, A Xerox Company

“The Council has been an extraordinary resource in providing information regarding trends and processes relating to overall transportation and smart card issues. The meetings have been forthright and targeted. The information provided is empirical and practical. The Council is recognized in the overall transportation industry and on multiple occasions we have quoted information provided by the Council. In addition, we have been able to network with industry peers and associates. The knowledge base and experience of the members provide a wonderful database of industry information.” —ThomasWunk,VicePresidentofOperationsforScheidt&BachmannUSAInc.

About the Smart Card Alliance

The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology. Through specific projects such as education programs, market research, advocacy, industry relations and open forums, the Alliance keeps its members connected to industry leaders and innovative thought. The Alliance is the single industry voice for smart cards, leading industry discussion on the impact and value of smart cards in the U.S. and Latin America. For more information please visit www.smartcardalliance.org.

The Smart Card Alliance Industry and Technology Councils are focused groups within the overall structure of the Alliance. Councils have been created to foster increased industry collaboration within a specified industry or market segment and produce tangible results, speeding smart card adoption and industry growth. Groups collaborate on specific deliverables, including reports, briefings and educational material. The Smart Card Alliance currently has five active Councils focusing on contactless and mobile payments, healthcare, identity, physical access and transportation industries. Council participation is open to any Smart Card Alliance member who wishes to contribute to the Council projects.

Health care organizations worldwide are implementing smart health cards supporting a wide variety of features and applications. Smart health cards can improve the security and privacy of patient information, provide the secure carrier for portable medical records, reduce healthcare fraud, support new processes for portable medical records, provide secure access to emergency medical information, enable compliance with government initiatives and mandates, and provide the platform to implement other applications as needed by the healthcare organization.

The Smart Card Alliance Healthcare Council brings together payers, providers, and technologists to promote the adoption of smart cards in U.S. healthcare organizations and within the national health IT infrastructure. The Healthcare Council provides a forum where all stakeholders can collaborate to educate the market on the how smart cards can be used and to work on issues inhibiting the industry.

Healthcare Council Activities

Healthcare Council activities stimulate the understanding, adoption and widespread acceptance of single and multi-application smart card technology for healthcare applications. The Healthcare Council’s activities include:

Providing educational resources for healthcare • organizations, consumers, government organizations and members to foster deployment of smart cards in the healthcare marketplace;

Identifying the challenges and opportunities in the • emerging healthcare marketplace for applications that can be supported by smart card technology;

Promoting the development and use of standards for • healthcare applications.

Council ResourcesA Healthcare CFO’s Guide to Smart Card Technology and • Applications

Comments on HHS guidance: Guidance Specifying • the Technologies and Methodologies that Render Protected Health Information Unusable, Unreadable, or Indecipherable to Unauthorized Individuals

Effective Healthcare Identity Management: A Necessary • First Step for Improving U.S. Healthcare Information Systems, in collaboration with the Identity Council.

Healthcare Identity Management: The Foundation for a • Secure and Trusted National Health Information Network, in collaboration with the Identity Council

Healthcare ID Resources•

HIPAA Compliance and Smart Cards: Solutions to Privacy • and Security Requirements, Smart Card Alliance Healthcare Council white paper

Identity Management in Healthcare webinar•

Implementation profiles of healthcare organizations using • smart cards - French Sesam Vitale Health Card - German Health Card - Mount Sinai Medical Center Personal Health Card - Queens Health Network - University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

Medical Identity Theft in Healthcare •

Protecting Your Health Information: Raising Public • Awareness of the Privacy and Security Challenges of Healthcare Information Management, briefing held in collaboration with the Identity Council and Secure ID Coalition

Response to NISTIR 7497, Draft Security Architecture Design • Process for Health Information Exchanges (HIEs)

Smart Card Applications in the U.S. Healthcare Industry, • Smart Card Alliance Healthcare Council white paper

Smart Cards in U.S. Healthcare: Benefits for Patients, • Providers and Payers, Smart Card Alliance Healthcare Council white paper

Smart Card Technology in Healthcare: Frequently Asked • Questions

Healthcare Council

Healthcare Council Resources can be found at www.smartcardalliance.org/pages/activities-councils-healthcare

Fall 2010

Council OfficersChair: Paul Contino, Mount Sinai Medical CenterVice Chair: Michael Magrath, GemaltoSecretary, Dale Grogan, LifeMed / SMART Association

Council Steering CommitteePaul Contino, Mount Sinai Medical CenterDale Grogan, LifeMed / SMART AssociationMichael Magrath, GemaltoOla Martins, Oberthur TechnologiesMatthew Neuman, Giesecke & Devrient

Council Members Booz Allen HamiltonCardLogixComputer Sciences Corp. (CSC)DeloitteDieboldFiservGemaltoGiesecke & DevrientHPHoneywellIBMLifeMed Card, Inc.MasterCard WorldwideMount Sinai Medical CenterNorthrop Grumman CorporationOberthur TechnologiesOrganizational Change Future WorkplaceOTI AmericaPPG Industries, Inc.SCM MicrosystemsSmartcard Marketing SolutionsST MicroelectronicsThales e-SecurityU.S. Department of DefenseVeriFoneVisa Inc.Watchdata TechnologiesXTec, Inc.

Member Comments

“The theme for the Healthcare Council is education and collaboration. We are seeing the number of smart card implementations in healthcare growing across the country and now is the time for us to provide a forum to share experiences, address pressing issues, and examine and learn about the role smart cards are playing in healthcare today and the important role they can play in the future. Patient identification, security and privacy, data exchange and consumer empowerment are some of the areas smart cards can greatly improve. We hope to educate our healthcare leaders and vendor community about the advantages of smart cards.” —PaulContino,VicePresidentofInformationTechnology, Mount Sinai Medical Center and Council Chair

“We at LifeMed/SMART have been tremendously pleased with our participation with the Smart Card Alliance. Not only are we getting front-line information as to the other goings-on around the globe, we are able to help shape policy that will not only forward our industry, but establish the foundation for years to come. We could not be more pleased with the Smart Card Alliance – it has been the best investment we have made as a company!” —DaleGrogan,DirectorofSmartCardInitiatives,SMARTAssociation and Council Secretary

“The Smart Card Alliance’s Healthcare Council is focused on improving the securityand privacy issues facing the U.S. healthcare system as we move our antiquatedpaper-based systems into the electronic world. Through educational initiatives andcollaboration, Council members are focused on increasing the adoption of secureand standards-based smart card technology in the U.S. healthcare system. Gemaltois pleased with the opportunity to actively participate on the Healthcare Counciland help drive adoption of this technology.” —MichaelMagrath,Director,BusinessDevelopment- Government & Healthcare, Gemalto and Council Vice Chair

About the Smart Card Alliance

The Smart Card Alliance is a not-for-profit, multi-industry association working to stimulate the understanding, adoption, use and widespread application of smart card technology. Through specific projects such as education programs, market research, advocacy, industry relations and open forums, the Alliance keeps its members connected to industry leaders and innovative thought. The Alliance is the single industry voice for smart cards, leading industry discussion on the impact and value of smart cards in the U.S. and Latin America. For more information please visit www.smartcardalliance.org.

The Smart Card Alliance Industry and Technology Councils are focused groups within the overall structure of the Alliance. Councils have been created to foster increased industry collaboration within a specified industry or market segment and produce tangible results, speeding smart card adoption and industry growth. Groups collaborate on specific deliverables, including reports, briefings and educational material. The Smart Card Alliance currently has five active Councils focusing on contactless and mobile payments, healthcare, identity, physical access and transportation industries. Council participation is open to any Smart Card Alliance member who wishes to contribute to the Council projects.

The Smart Card Alliance will hold the 2011 Mobile & Transit Payments Summit on February 15-17, 2011, at the Marriott City Center Hotel in Salt Lake City, UT. This important industry gathering will focus on exciting new trends and projects involving mobile payments and the continued movement towards open contactless bank card payments for transportation and general retail payment applications.

The mobile and transit markets have many common industry stakeholders including the chip and card manufacturers, terminal manufacturers, payment brands, issuing banks, payments processors, systems integrators and new mobile technology suppliers. Having a summit for Smart Card Alliance Payments Council and Transportation Council members and other common stakeholders to meet in joint sessions to discuss the opportunities and obstacles ahead will allow everyone present to gain more insight into the commonalities that connect these two markets. There will be individual breakout sessions scheduled for mobile payments and transportation payments stakeholders to meet separately for more in depth discussions on speci� c topics related to the NFC proximity payments and remote mobile industry and the transit industry respectively.

Marriott City Center Hotel • Salt Lake City, UT • Feb. 15-17, 2011

2011 Mobile and Transit Payments Summit4th Annual

The Summit will include sessions on current U.S. and international mobile payments operators and handset manufacturing trends including devices and applications supporting NFC payments, mobile marketing, peer-to-peer payments, alternate mobile payments platforms, and mobile wallets. Transit payments sessions will include reports from major transit operators and integrators discussing the advances in closed-loop payments, open loop bank card payments, prepaid cards and emerging international standards.

MOBILE PAYMENTS Topics List Includes: Mobile Network Operator Panel • Mobile Payments Services Providers • Issuers Perspectives on Mobile & Transit Payments • Mobile Associations Panel • Mobile Applications Panel • Mobile NFC Devices • Mobile Handsets • Merchants on Mobile Payments Panel • TSM Panel • Prepaid Mobile Phones of the Unbanked • Potential regulatory impact on mobile payment • Mobile Alternate Payments

TRANSIT PAYMENTS Topics List Includes: Open Payments Transportation Operators Panel • Strategies to Address the Unbanked • Transit Integrator Panel – Vision for Future • Transit Chip Technology Panel • Transit Mobile Ticketing Applications • Transit/ ID Convergence • Transit Operator’s Panel (closed loop) • Migration strategies from closed loop to combination closed/open loop payments • ISO /CEN/ GlobalPlatform standards • International Transit Standards

Register and view agenda online at www.smartcardalliance.org.

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