KISA to establish blockchain trust framework for public services

CoinNess Global
3 min readNov 16, 2023

The Korea Internet & Security Agency (KISA) is developing a system called the Korea-Blockchain Trust Framework (K-BTF) to facilitate the development and operation of blockchain-based public services, said Lee Kang-hyo, a senior official at KISA, during the 2023 Blockchain Grand Week on Wednesday (local time).

Blockchain Grand Week is an event hosted by the Ministry of Science and ICT and jointly organized by the National IT Industry Promotion Agency (NIPA), the Korea Internet and Security Agency (KISA) and the Institute of Information and Communications Technology Planning and Evaluation (IITP) to promote the value of blockchain technology in enhancing trust in the digital age.

Photo by Philipp Katzenberger on Unsplash

Previous roadblocks

KISA has executed over 100 blockchain pilot projects over the last five years, but only a few have been carried out due to significant costs and interoperability barriers between services. According to the agency, it costs KRW 450 million (approximately $348,000) to carry out one project. Therefore, it has shifted its focus to making development easier and supporting data interoperability between services.

“Developing blockchain-based public services entails building a blockchain platform, developing services and connecting them with government legacy systems,” Lee explained. “Blockchain developer APIs are becoming standardized overseas, and we thought it was time for us to leverage such advantages as well.”

Another challenge was that previous blockchain-based public or governmental services did not offer smooth user experiences (UX), often requiring the installation of separate wallets or applications with each use.

Bringing cost-efficient, user-friendly public blockchain services

To address these issues, KISA decided to focus on three key areas for building K-BTF — cost reduction, convenient development and usability — with an overall groundwork that covers interfaces, services and security while minimizing intrusion into the private sector.

Once the K-BTF is established, government agencies will be able to easily plan and operate blockchain-assisted services such as decentralized identifiers (DIDs) and non-fungible tokens (NFTs). The costs for development will be determined based on how much a given service is used instead of the original base cost of KRW 450 million.

Also, public institutions tend to go through staffing changes quite often, and building services under K-BTF will enable governmental operations to run normally without any roadblocks or inconveniences caused by such changes.

Lee went on to mention that although a wide array of services can be built on the framework, there will be basic requirements in terms of functionality, performance and security that must be fulfilled for a service to run on it. To verify this, the KISA established a testing and certification system that utilizes its Cloud Security Assurance Program (CSAP) certification system and the Information Security Management System (ISMS).

To improve usability, the framework will require users to install only one digital wallet that stores digital forms of identification and various authentication certificates.

The KISA is set to start working on the K-BTF next year. Notably, it plans to create a governance system consisting of government agencies — those that are the demand clients for the framework –, private corporations and related experts. Six core services that will employ K-BTF have already been selected after a review of 34 pilot projects proposed in 2021 and 2022 and major national blockchain projects from six overseas countries. These six services are NFTs, DIDs, data origin authentication, data history tracking, Blockchain as a Service (BaaS) and digital wallets.

Lee emphasized that the goal of the K-BTF is to derive services that can be used by the public sector within regulatory and technological boundaries.

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