Internet Identity Workshop Blog Aggregator Archive for 10/29/2005

This planet is an aggregation of blogs for the Internet Identity Workshop 2005. If you're attending IIW2005 and blogging about it, please contact Phil Windley and give him the URL for you RSS feed. Here is a list of current contributors.

You can also get an RSS feed of the contents of this page. Note that this aggregator will be turned off after Thursday, and it won't be actively updated after that. The content will remain, however.

October 29, 2005

From Johannes Ernst...

Aldo Castaneda's Interview With Me Is On-line

This was my first podcast, which was fun to do. Aldo is doing a series of interviews with people related to Digital Identity, as part of his

October 29, 2005 09:48 PM

From Doc Searls...

Loose links

October 29, 2005 05:33 PM

Finding the gray

October 29, 2005 05:33 PM

October 28, 2005

From Johannes Ernst...

My Talk at the SDForum Security SIG

Ames Cornish of Montebello Partners

October 28, 2005 10:33 PM

Phil Windley's summary of my LID talk at IIW

He blogged about it here. Quote:

Johannes starts off with a discussion of REST because that's critical to his design principles for LID. He describes it this way: "everything that matters on the Internet has a URL, can be bookmarked, can be found via Google, can be hyperlinked, can be tagged, and can be accessed with a browser."

October 28, 2005 10:33 PM

From Doc Searls...

How can one not love...

October 28, 2005 09:03 PM

Attention podcasters

October 28, 2005 09:03 PM

Read on

October 28, 2005 08:33 PM

Or at least I'm free to be

Seems I'm a socially permissive economic conservative.

October 28, 2005 08:33 PM

I'll drink to that

Love the Big Ad.

October 28, 2005 08:03 PM

The Blogosmear

October 28, 2005 05:03 PM

From Ian Glazer...

A me shaped hole in the web and other thoughts from Internet Identity Workshop 2005

There's a hole in the web
The web has a hole in it.  That hole is shaped just like me.  Anyone, with sufficient time and desire, could find the scattered bits that make up my composite identity and pour them into the hole.  Between Google, Zabasearch, Technorati, del.icio.us and others you could fill the

by Ian Glazer on October 28, 2005 10:39 AM

From Dick Hardt on Identity 2.0...

OpenID at IIW

Today was the group hug day at IIW. I spent sometime with Brad Fitzpatrick of LiveJournal fame. Brad also created OpenID, which is some pretty simple, light weight distributed authentica

by Dick on October 28, 2005 06:26 AM under Events

From Doc Searls...

Worth the price of submission

October 28, 2005 03:03 AM

From Phil Windley's Technometria...

IIW2005: Day Two Wrap-Up

Today we ran the conference using something called "structured open space." Kaliya Hamlin was anxious that we use it as a way of creating discussion. I'll admit that I was somewhat skeptical, but it turned out very well. Here's how it worked:

October 28, 2005 02:48 AM under Identity

From Doc Searls...

YaWhere?

October 28, 2005 12:33 AM

Journal journey

October 28, 2005 12:33 AM

October 27, 2005

From Phil Windley's Technometria...

IIW2005: Identity Rights Agreements

This afternoon there was a good sized group that got together to discuss Identity Rights Agreements.

One big problem is the legal status of such agreements. Mary Rundle was very helpful to the discussion here

October 27, 2005 09:42 PM under Identity

IIW2005: Attention Data as Identity

Attention data is the record of what you've read, what you're spending time on, and what you should be paying attention to. Two different groups are thinking about attention data in a general way: Attention.xml and Attention Trust. My impression is that Attention.xml is more about the technology needed to track yourself while Attention Trust is more "rights" to "data you own."

We had a discussion this morning at IIW2005 about attention data and identity. It's clear that

October 27, 2005 06:33 PM under Identity

From Ian Glazer...

Identity as an unpatched device

So I am sitting here at the Internet Identity Workshop and so far, I've been impressed with the quality of the presenter.  (I'll have more on that later.)

I was chatting with Dale Olds from Novell and came across the following t

by Ian Glazer on October 27, 2005 02:48 PM

Thoughts on the Internet Identity Workshop 2005 Day 1

Overall, I am really enjoying this workshop.  It serves as a great high speed  primer for a variety of identity issues and technologies. 

Som

by Ian Glazer on October 27, 2005 02:13 PM

From Phil Windley's Technometria...

IIW2005: Summary at Between the Lines

I posted some thoughts and a summary of Day One at Between the Lines.

October 27, 2005 05:03 AM under Identity

IIW2005: Pictures

I've posted some pictures I took today at IIW2005 on my Gallery. There's also some at Flickr that are tagged with iiw2005. I tried to get every speaker, but missed a few--just got busy writing and forgot to take a picture. Sorry.

October 27, 2005 04:33 AM under Identity

IIW2005: Joel Getzendanner on Identity Commons

Joel Getzendanner is introducing Identity Commons. Identity Commons (IC) is not a service provider, a technological alternative, or an umbrella organization. IC is a place for those working on identity. IC is technologically neutral. IC is intende

October 27, 2005 01:18 AM under Identity

IIW2005: Paul Trevithick on Higgins Trust Framework

Identity is a three-body problem. When you use a credit card, there's pre-existing trust between the airline and the bank (brokered by Visa). You're the third party in that equation. Lots of groups that we belong to, lots of implementations. People want to manage relationships between extrem

October 27, 2005 12:33 AM under Identity

October 26, 2005

From Phil Windley's Technometria...

IIW 2005: Brad Fitzpatrick on OpenID

OpenID is similar to LID in that URLs are used for identifiers. Identity URLs can be static web pages so there's a low barrier to entry. Also, no SSL is required, nor is a browser plugin. OpenID is simply a way to prove you own a URL.

OpenID can be stateful or stateless. Stateful access is faster, but requires more infrastructure to support.

When you grab a URL, the URL has a way of saying who the identity server is (in the <link/> tag). The identity server provides a way for the person claiming the URL to prove (i.e. a password) that they are the pe

October 26, 2005 11:48 PM under Identity


Last Modified: Tuesday, 01-Nov-2005 14:21:34 MST