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Course Outline
Legal Framework
Core assumptions and principles of the eIDAS Regulation and the Act on Trust Services and Electronic Identification, dated 5 September 2016.
- Objectives and foundational assumptions of the European regulation.
- Core principles governing the eIDAS Regulation.
- The principle of non-discrimination regarding electronic signatures and seals, electronic timestamps, registered electronic delivery services, and electronic documents.
- The principle establishing qualified electronic signatures as equivalent to handwritten signatures.
- The principle presuming the integrity of data and the authenticity of its origin when attached to a qualified electronic seal.
- The principle presuming the accuracy of date and time, as well as data integrity, as indicated by a qualified timestamp.
- The principle presuming data integrity, date, and time accuracy as confirmed by a qualified registered electronic delivery service.
- The principle of mutual recognition for qualified signatures, qualified seals, and qualified electronic time stamps.
- The principle governing the certification of Qualified Electronic Signature and Seal Devices.
- The principle of mutual cross-border recognition for notified electronic identification schemes.
- The principle of voluntary notification for electronic identification schemes.
- The principle ensuring interoperability between electronic identification systems and trust services.
- The principle of free circulation of trust services within the internal market.
- The principle of free establishment of trust services on national markets.
- The principle of technological neutrality and openness to innovation.
- The principle of international recognition for trust services.
- The principle ensuring equal access to trust services.
- The principle ensuring the security of electronic transactions within the internal market.
- The principle of trust regarding security levels.
- The principle of cooperation between Member States.
- The principle of good practice.
- The principle of safety and continuity in cross-border healthcare.
- The principle of compliance with data protection regulations.
Proposed Amendments to eIDAS 2.0
- Enhanced transaction security measures.
- Understanding digital identity.
- Utilizing digital identity effectively.
- The European Digital Identity Wallet.
- EPTC and security considerations.
- Practical examples of identity usage.
- Implications for Qualified Trust Service Providers.
- Impact on businesses.
- Real-world impact analysis.
- Strategies for preparing for these changes.
Requirements
Target Audience
- Anyone interested in the aforementioned subjects.
21 Hours
Testimonials (3)
The trainer's practical knowledge and his engaging anecdotes.
Mario Beckel - IABG mbH
Course - Identity and Access Management (IAM)
get to understand more about the product and some key differences between RHDS and open source OpenLDAP.
Jackie Xie - Westpac Banking Corporation
Course - 389 Directory Server for Administrators
Defenitely the 90% HandsOn-Training and the Revisions of the Activities i had to do during the Training. The Traing was intense, due to i was the only member. But i learned a lot and Chris answered every single question i had. I would defenitly recommend this course.