offline applications
such as signing of electronic documents on
the local machine e.g. in combination with pdf-over. MOCCA local is open source
software and available for download at:
www.egovlabs.gv.at
.
In addition, in
November 2009,
the third private delivery service for official notifications
receives its license and goes online. The service (which is currently not taking new
subscribers), is operated by Telekom Austria AG. Citizens can now choose between
'www.meinbrief.at', 'www.brz-zustelldienst.at' and 'zustellung.telekom.at'.
In
March 2009,
the second private delivery service for official notifications receives its
license and goes online. The service is operated by the Federal Computing Centre -
BRZ.
In
January 2009,
the personalised version,
www.myhelp.gv.at
, of the popular site
Help.gv.at
is launched. Users who have a citizen card can submit their personal profile.
The personal data is securely stored and only accessible to the authenticated user. The
profile is used to tailor the information content of HELP.gv.at according to the needs and
the life situation of the user. Additional services include a reminder service that alerts
the citizen, for example, when a passport is about to expire, access to the eDelivery
system 'meinbrief.at' and the possibility to lodge user names and passwords for certain
web mail services.
2008
In
November 2008,
the first version of the new online citizen card middleware
MOCCA
(Modular Open Citizen Card Architecture) is released at the open source platform
http://egovlabs.gv.at/
. It allows the implementation of citizen card based authentication
at web sites without requiring the installation of software at the user’s computer. The
necessary functionalities are handled by a light-weight Java applet that is downloaded
and securely run in the user’s browser. The software is available as open source
software and actively developed and maintained by the
eGovernment Innovation
Center
, with additional support from the eGovernment community.
The
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