B. To enable the e-governance
egov works fine even without a single identity. You need one per department.
and have totally unnecessary duplication of systems and data..
not only will it be costlier, it will also give very little value addition, if some department for industries cannot cross reference your records from other department (law, taxes, whatever)
also let us see how practical that is, total number of central government departments == a few hundred avg. number of state government departments == a few hundred (multiply this by number of states)
having separate identity per department is like the old 1990's systems in big companies before LDAP.. ie, u had a separate login to each system.. today all major corporations are moving towards single sign-on for different intra company systems.
On 16/09/06 17:19 +0100, Vivek Rai wrote:
B. To enable the e-governance
egov works fine even without a single identity. You need one per department.
and have totally unnecessary duplication of systems and data..
It isn't duplication of systems and data either.
not only will it be costlier, it will also give very little value addition, if some department for industries cannot cross reference your records from other department (law, taxes, whatever)
Companies are not individuals. Most companies are also not monopolies, and it should be feasible for you as a customer to go elsewhere to someone who provides you with better service.
You don't have choices with a government, and _only_ the government should be able to use force in civil society.
Repeat after me Convinience is often the enemy of security.
Devdas Bhagat