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At the ID Workshop leading into the RSA Conference, we announced the impending formation of the Kantara Initiative. To those following the Identity Community, this wasn’t really ground-breaking news as we’ve been working on this for the past year or so (under various monikers). What was worth mentioning in the workshop, however, was that we’d signed a number of founding member organizations (including the Information Card Foundation, Internet Society, DataPortability Project, XDI.org, Project Concordia) and put out a call for more to join before the launch in a few months. Oh, and we settled on the name.
After much (much) debate, the founders settled on the name Kantara as it is a Swahili word for “bridge” and has Arabic roots meaning “harmony”. And yes, we know that some people believe it should be spelled “Qantara” (while others want to add a trailing “h” on the end, too). In the end, there was strong support for the name as it blends key points of the group’s mission to:
Foster identity community harmonization, interoperability, innovation, and broad adoption through the development of open identity specifications, operational frameworks, education programs, deployment and usage best practices for privacy-respecting, secure access to online services.
Beyond the announcement itself, the bridge-building we hope to facilitate already struck a positive chord throughout the RSA Conference. Of the meetings I attended, here are a list of them where Kantara was mentioned (either by the presenters or in audience questions):
- Fostering Collaboration and Opportunities in Identity Management
- Federate Access Policy, Not Identity
- Building Authorization into the Enterprise Identity System
- Cloud Computing and Identity Challenges
- Identity Management for the Cloud: Challenges, Opportunities, and Best Practices
- Identity and Privacy Models
In each case, the comments were positive and hopeful. Like opening a new birthday present, the IdM professionals were excited to play with the new group. Our goal, of course, is to make sure the Kantara Initiative lives up to our collectively high expectations. Taking a page out of the Concordia playbook, the initiative will provide neutral ground for all participants. There is no cost for participation, and all contributors are welcome. The playing field is level, and we’re excited to see what projects take advantage of the unique opportunity to have a truly open dialog.
The Tweet Race: As you can tell from the photo to the right, Eve Maler (a.k.a. @xmlgrrl) was apparently happy that her Kantara announcement Tweet beat mine. I’m relatively convinced, however, that she cheated by typing her’s in advance (only needing to hit “send” from the stage), while I had to type mine on the spot. In fact, her announcement blog post also won. Hmmph.
Most people working in the identity field are generally resigned to living an invisible existence. Unlike when I was working for the New England Patriots (where I couldn’t walk ten feet without bumping into coverage of our every breath), toiling away on standards and specifications often receives little to no recognition. That’s why it was great to see the Liberty Alliance work getting props from Peter Stern, the executive vice president and chief strategy officer for Time Warner Cable.
In an article in Multichannel News, Stern talked about how its “TV Everywhere” initiative is ensuring their Internet video services can scale. Deep inside their strategy for the widest possible deployment is their embracing of Liberty Alliance identity management specifications:
Stern said Time Warner Cable has “embraced” the Liberty Alliance standards for creating and establishing users IDs. “We think we can create a scalable solution, without needing a common database across the MSOs,” he said. “The plan is to do this bilaterally, using open standards.”
While it’s not immediately clear which specific standards they’re adopting (it could be a mix of ID-WSF, ID-FF with SAML2.0), it’s clear they’ve evaluated them against their goals as quoted from the article:
- “We’re looking to create a model that’s friendly to cable, works for consumers… so if you’re paying for it in your living room, you can also watch it online,” Schwartz said.
- Stern emphasized that the authentication process for TV Everywhere must be very easy for customers and programmers. The user ID and password capabilities for TV Everywhere must be integrated so users can log in once, and access multiple programmers’ services.
- The system must also “deliver authorizations quickly — consumers don’t want to have to wait for several seconds, let alone minutes, to watch the content so we need to be sure we can build scalable system… across millions of requests happening on a regular basis,” Stern said.
It’s not the popular press (meaning the average user won’t know, or care, about this), but it’s great to see the word spreading about LAP’s identity management tools. Of specific interest to me is that Time Warner Cable is obviously paying close attention to the need to deploy highly scalable and interoperable systems that service end users without locking them into a proprietary solution.
If you actively follow the identity space, you’ll already have heard about this, so feel free to click away (I won’t be offended). On the other hand, if you’re only a casual observer or are curious about IdM, read on.
This morning the Liberty Alliance (LAP) announced that the Internet Society (ISOC) is joining the LAP Management Board. ISOC will be joining other management board members from AOL, BT, CA, Fidelity Investments, Intel, Novell, NTT, Oracle and Sun Microsystems.
And according to my boss at ISOC, Lucy Lynch, “ISOC is eager to participate in Liberty Alliance’s well-established collaborative processes to help ensure that the specifications upon which these new technologies are built will promote continued innovation and serve the interests of all Internet users around the world.” And specifically, to join LAP in “promoting and developing the technical foundations of online identity and trust that will be crucial in supporting interoperable, secure and privacy-preserving applications and services on the Internet.”
Over the past couple of years there has been a noticeable increase in momentum around cohesive Identity Management solutions. ISOC working together with LAP is another step toward helping bring the stakeholders together. Undoubtedly, however, there’s still no clear direction for everyone around the table, but bridging across groups will benefit everyone involved (and those who don’t even know they’re a part of the equation).
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Reason to Choose an Identity Provider
Buried in a post about OpenID user experience by Chris Messina is a concise bit of advice for users:
The “fourth-party” reference is to an article titled “Get ready for ‘fourth party’ services” by Doc Searls in the Linux Journal.
Personally, I’m not a fan of the introduction of this term for the new party around the table. I like to think that a “third party” working on the user’s behalf fits the bill just fine. Following an object-oriented mindset, the third party can adopt the properties relating to it’s responsibility in a transaction without being locked between two others (necessitating a fourth).
What I do like, however, is the concept Chris clarifies later:
To unpack this a bit, I see a compelling use case for identity providers emerging, possibly piggy-backing on the PCI Security work. So far, the first quote about picking an IdP is falling on deaf ears as users don’t really think about their choice. They use what they use and that’s about as far as it goes. What users need is a compelling reason to think in terms of choice, and the model Chris suggests might be it.
I spent some time helping to build an affinity card system with MBNA a couple years ago, and that process was telling. As it relates to this discussion, I can easily see that they would jump on the opportunity to capture a market like this. All that needs to happen is for someone to write up a clear business plan around the concept. In fact, I’ll bet there’s an MBA student out there somewhere looking for their thesis.
In a nutshell, here’s what I think this looks like:
C3 still has to convince it’s customers (and attract new ones) to see value in paying for a secure IdP. I don’t believe this is too far away from happening organically, so now’s the time for a C3 to start working on the product line.
Further, it’s distinctly possible that Id end points are going to force the issue by requiring verified identity assurance and security beyond what your run-of-the-mill OP can provide. Hence services like MyID.is (which has it’s own issues, of course, but that’s the direction). If a C3 gets in the game, I have a feeling they’ll be able to build a more effective federation of trust, even when used in an anonymous context.