2024-06-04 Meeting notes
Date
Jun 4, 2024
Participants
Voting Participants
Name | Attending |
---|---|
James Kragh, Chair | Y |
Justin Byrd, Vice Chair | Y |
Noreen Whysel, Secretary | Y |
Bev Corwin | N |
Sal D'Agostino | Y |
Thomas Sullivan | Y |
Catherine Schulten | N |
Jim StClair | N |
Jeff Brennan | N |
Thomas Jones | Y |
Jorge Flores | Y |
Quorum: Yes.
Non-Voting Participants
Name | Attending |
---|---|
Simone Alcorn | N |
Maria Vachino | N |
Renee Hunter | N |
Isha Chhatwal | N |
Goals
Preparese ID app demo
Digital Verification for Small Businesses
Role of Social Worker/Libraries in providing identity related services in public places (Next time)
Discussion topics
Time | Item | Presenter | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
| Preparese demo | @Jorge Flores | Demonstrated Farmworker ID app, Preparese
Working on Bluetooth/low energy so can use credentials when on connected to wifi.
The Alliance Specifications Download Request Form
|
Digital Verification for Small Businesses |
| Digital Verification for Small Businesses integrating with a POS system like Square or Toast would make it easier for small business to adopt digital credential scanning. Clover and MyPOS (open source platform recently bought by Oracle) https://community.clover.com/topics/16410/clover%20developer%20community.html Here is a good doc file from Oracle about developing for Microspos: Oracle MICROS Simphony Documentation Library Tablets for healthcare services and intake. PEMC group model describes verifier and service provider (including verification and payment) RIUP demonstration project would be good to present to British Columbia. What end point engagements might we demonstrate? Justin suggested Walmart. Invite Catherine to either come or invite someone from Walmart Will continue discussion next time | |
| Status of DII Doc | @Jim Kragh | LC Meeting is in two weeks Sal will make sure it’s on the agenda. |
Adjourned at 2:05pmEST
From Jim Kragh’s 1/3/24 email to RIUP-WG:
If we are going to serve the underserved, we have to go where they are and we must put pen to paper, script out a plan in order to make it work. The Ms Andrea (content was shared a few weeks ago) just might set the stage for us. This is hands-on material, let's brainstorm how we might engage here or somewhere. Read on......
This has become part of the library school curriculum. I see continuing ed opportunities and one off lectures on this topic regularly. I can forward any that come my way if anyone is interested in the challenges of serving unhoused and unschooled patrons.
On Thu, May 23, 2024 at 3:44 PM Tom Jones <thomasclinganjones@gmail.com> wrote:
Andrea Hansen-Miller, a licensed clinical social worker who helps homeless people, runs her office out of the Minneapolis Central Library, offering visitors snacks, warm clothes, assistance finding housing, and mental-health support. “The police regularly clear the city’s streets of encampments, but officers don’t run unhoused people out of Central,” Paige Williams explains in this in-depth, on-the-ground report from Minnesota. “As long as they follow the rules, any patron—and everyone at the library is called a patron—can stay all day, every day.” Such policies make the library a natural place for social workers to meet individuals where they are likely to be—but not everyone who works there has the training or skills necessary to assist unhoused people, many of whom are in crisis. “A lot of people come into the public library, or go into librarianship, and are shocked by the fact that it’s not their childhood library,” one librarian at Central explains. “It can be exhausting to see so many people who need so much, or who have so little.” In these ways, as Williams explores, the library is a mirror, reflecting our shared social distress, while also offering insights into how we must adapt to better support those in need..
Reference links:
Imbedded within the Digital Verification for Small Businesses doc (Version Date: 2024-05-28), link: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1keHesvQHrCdbNPavI3imleBm4i9ymXM_/edit
is the link to the Purpose Consent Query {POC} v4 Apr 2, 2024, doc.; link:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1n7HobJ6QTsNld5rn1uuIiNw0A__L44ug/edit
Within the body of the POC doc is the stated Problem to be Solved: (pgs.1-2 of 7 page PCO doc).
Problem to be Solved:
The user agent knows nothing about the verifier before the query is received. So the query must provide trust context to the user agent so that it can display a trust assurance that the user can understand. Presumably this would include a signature and certificate of some sort. When the user accepts the request then the first step of trust establishment is completed. The presentation response from the holder to the verifier should allow the completion of trust establishment. Trust establishment may fail at either step as either party may reject the establishment.
If the verifier rejects the presentation response from the holder, they may be able to continue the interchange by sending information to the holder’s agent to allow a different response, for example if the holder has a different credential that might work.
The query is sent to the holder’s device which needs to select the user agent that will process the request. If the device cannot find a wallet it may be able to help the holder locate an appropriate app.
If we are going to serve the underserved, we have to go where they are and we must put pen to paper, script out a plan in order to make it work. The Ms Andrea (content was shared a few weeks ago) just might set the stage for us. This is hands-on material, let's brainstorm how we might engage here or somewhere. Read on......