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Gates Says Microsoft Will Support OpenID
Posted by
kdawson
on Tue Feb 06, 2007 06:23 PM
from the who-i-am dept.
from the who-i-am dept.
An anonymous reader writes "In his RSA conference keynote today, Bill Gates announced that Microsoft will support the decentralized OpenID digital identity protocol, in addition to WS-* and CardSpace (transcribed notes, video). From its roots in LID, i-names, and Sxip, the first major deployment in LiveJournal, and now with support from Techorati, Magnolia, Symantec, a suspected mass-deployment by AOL, and a number of startups — using URLs as digital identities has caught hold."
Related Stories
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IT: The Case for OpenID 229 comments
An anonymous reader writes "VeriSign and NetMesh are making the case for OpenID, the grass-roots, decentralized digital identity system already supported by LiveJournal, Six Apart, Technorati, VeriSign and many startups, reportedly growing 5% every single week. They say OpenID 'is fundamentally different from other identity technologies' because it is a 'fully decentralized system' and has a 'much lighter cost structure' than any alternative, like Microsoft Passport, CardSpace or Liberty Alliance. Time to remove username and password from your site and add OpenID libraries instead, so visitors can authenticate with their blog URL?" From the article: "If tomorrow, for example, you decide you don't like the Diffie-Hellman cryptographic key exchange at the root of OpenID authentication, you can develop your own way of authenticating, and deploy it within the OpenID framework. If you have an idea for a new identity-related service that nobody else ever thought of, you can deploy it into the OpenID framework as soon as your code is ready. This radical decentralization on all levels of the stack, both technically and organizationally, is a very strong catalyst for attracting innovators and their innovations. This makes OpenID a superior choice for identity-related innovation."
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AOL Now Supports OpenID 163 comments
Nurgled writes "On Sunday John Panzer announced that AOL now has experimental OpenID server support. This means that every AOL user now has an OpenID identifier. OpenID is a decentralized cross-site authentication system which has been growing in popularity over the last few months. AOL is the first large provider to offer OpenID services, and though they do not currently accept logins to their services with OpenID identifiers from elsewhere, they are apparently working on it. The next big challenge for OpenID proponents is teaching AOL's userbase how to make use of this new technology."
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Hardware: Hardware Based OpenID Service Available 119 comments
An anonymous reader writes "TrustBearer Labs has announced a new service that lets you use various hardware based security tokens like smartcards and biometric devices with OpenID. A hardware based connection to OpenID allows higher levels of security and makes it easier for the end-user to control their credentials. OpenID is a decentralized cross-site authentication system that has been gaining momentum for quite a while now with major supporters like AOL, Google and Microsoft already announced."
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Embrace, (Score:5, Insightful)
You know the rest.
Re:Embrace, (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunately, OpenID will utterly fail in it's task: it will never be a trustworthy source of identification. It's only useful for things where MS Passport was previously useful: throw-away Hotmail accounts and that's about it.
A Real Security(TM) implementation that required absolute knowledge of a person's identity would have to be based on the Web-of-Trust model, much like you don't have a single piece of identification. You have a driver's license, a social insurance number, a credit card, a health care card, etc. No one piece of ID is sufficient, especially when applying for new pieces of identification. The analogue on the Internet is similar, though even finer-grained. Instead of a series of governmental organizations correlating each other's data on a particular identity, every single person in the world is able to verify every other person's identity. This is known as "Federated Identity".
Such a mechanism does not preclude the idea that a government could support a particular identity; in fact, they could also sign a person's public key. While webs of trust are more difficult to set up, there is no longer a single point of failure in the identification. Going back to OpenID, all I need to do is supply my own authentication server, and I have corroborated my own identification. Or, in a slightly less legitimate fashion, I could take over someone else's authentication server and steal all the identities from it. A Web of trust is much more difficult to steal; you need to crack the passphrase on my certificate (not impossible, but much harder and I can revoke the certificate if I suspect that the certificate has been compromised). Once the DMV, Health Authority and Credit Card companies have all signed my public key, it's much more believable that something signed with my public key is definitely signed by me.
Parent
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Re:Embrace, (Score:5, Insightful)
Trust and identity are two different things. You're talking about trust. The fact that you can make up multiple identities doesn't matter unless you want somebody to trust one of them for something.
Trust is a big problem; moreso than identity. Furthermore, trust systems have identity as a requirement. And identity is useful outside of any advanced trust system. It makes sense to solve the identity problem first before moving on to complicated web of trust models.
The OpenID people are careful to distinguish between identity and trust. Trust is outside the scope of OpenID, but it's likely that any worthwhile trust system can be built on top of OpenID. You shouldn't use lack of trust as a basis to reject OpenID; in fact large-scale adoption of OpenID may well be helpful in developing a decent trust system.
PS: The one organisation that I expected to support OpenID much sooner than this is Google. Anybody have any ideas why they haven't jumped on board yet?
Parent
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Re:Embrace, (Score:4, Informative)
You seem to be confused about the scope of OpenID. OpenID is not a system for tying user accounts to personal identities. It simply provides secure, distributed user accounts. It's not failing at it's task, it's failing at a task that you seem to want, but OpenID was never designed to solve.
Parent
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When I go on the internet, I can be a different person. I may be a sad little 14 year old in real life, but on slashdot I'm a 35 year old IT professional. The last thing I want is to have my online ID tied to my real life identity.
If that were the case, then there is the potential that the signatures you had could be used to identify you outside of your cozy internet environment
Re:Embrace, (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
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This is Microsoft, after all.
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People are able to represent themselves with their own identity provider, and that isn't an email address.
I'm wondering what kind of spam you're thinking about?
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I'm wondering what kind of spam you're thinking about? :D
Last I checked, there were only three kinds of pure spam left:
Am I missing any? These days, everything else seems to be phishing (e.g. Nigerian 419 letters).
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Could someone translate this for me? (Score:5, Funny)
It's not just MS support (Score:5, Informative)
It's a two way thing; OpenID will support CardSpace as an identity selector. This is a "good thing", as it will stop the man in the middle attacks OpenID is very prone to. Of course the OpenID identity providers need to add support, like MEX endpoints and WS-Trust, which are all open specs.
CardSpace itself doesn't care what's on the identity provider side, they just need to talk the right talk.
Man in the Middle (Score:1)
That blows my analogy (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
as OOXML? (Score:3, Insightful)
It is urgent time that we gather some ressources to free citizens from that company. We see the progress Open Source has made without significant public subsidies. Why not invest a billion of public money into information freedom, free us from that company which funds all these damn lobbyists in parliament. We don't need Microsoft to tell us what an open standard is. We know what it is. It is 100% patent-free and no-rand community driven development. Free market, free competition, interoperable, open documented.
Before we get a free cyberspace, all these unethical companies need to be told a lesson. Now that Saddam is gone we have to go after rogue companies. It is important to safe our liberty and freedom of business. Unethical businesses need to be punished. Rotten companies are not good for business.
It was Gates who reportedly (their PR person told it Borsen) bribed the Danish Government: Get us software patents or we cut jobs in Denmark. Now he and his foundation are on the biopat lobbying front in Africa.
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That's not bribery, that's extortion. (Which I believe carries heavier penalties...)
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Bill Gates is FAR more powerful. A US president is highly unlikely to risk taking him head one.
The reasons I say he is more powerful are:
1) He has a lot of money that could be given in campaign contributions or spent to influence elections. If necessary he could even buy up some media companies (outright or just sufficiently large stakes in them to influence editorial policy) and exercise the sort of influence that Rupert Murdoch has in Britain.
2) He
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I mean, I know bad habits of that company from first hand. The USA spents billions on Iraq. Iraqi Freedom or Oil, I don't care. In business terms it shows how much nations invest in national security. Now, give a public Linux Foundation 1 Billion and let them develop a Desktop Linux which blows Microsoft Wi
Bad idea (Score:2)
Re:Bad idea (Score:5, Informative)
All of these FAQs and more are addressed on the OpenID site linked in the article summary.
Parent
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I don't want my bank to use it(well, they could, but there had better be another layer after I have identified myself), but I wouldn't mind if slashdot did.
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As such, if you try to spoof a user into believing mail coming from your botnet is coming from XYZ.ORG you're going to fail if they do the same checks, since your server isn't an "approved" one, and the only way to approve it is to have access to my D
Is your /. id useless? (Score:2)
Identity is quite a useful concept in itself. And as a bonus, you can build trust upon it.
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'Support'.... (Score:1, Redundant)
however, it won't be supported by useless.com (Score:4, Funny)
Today's web is crazy. Open ID is a pipe dream. Every direction you turn you're forced to create yet another account. Most of the time it's for one of those throw-away web startups created 10 times a day, but occasionaly it's worth the effort. It might be to purchase some fancy threads, order a pizza or see how fat the Cool Kids from high school have become. When it's that important, you can't afford to drop the ball. With a useless account you can practice without fear. So when it comes to the crunch, you're ready!
Who needs OpenID... (Score:3, Insightful)
Interesting Reading Reguarding Vulnerabilities (Score:2)
Don't sound like anything I am interested in...
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Except that in order to do all that, he had
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The first phpbb developer m
Blaming the user again is pathetic. (Score:4, Insightful)
He needs to deal with the engineering first. What good is an ID if your computer is one of the 25% of all Windoze computers with a keylogging bot on it? It's not the user's fault.
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CardSpace is worth looking at (Score:3, Informative)
It's worth looking into the specifics of CardSpace, which I'm kinda suprised there were no links that talked about that end of the equation.
CardSpace community site [netfx3.com] (Part of
CardSpace community PM [fearthecowboy.com]
Wikipedia entry and Identity providers (Score:4, Informative)
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Liberty Alliance (Score:2)
http://www.projectliberty.org/liberty/about/curren t_members [projectliberty.org]
Now compare it with that of OpenID, if you can find it on their wiki-like site. IMHO, this is just FUD to keep wind out of the sails of the Liberty Alliance. The same stupid tactic they have performed with the open source document format. Kill it by strengthening the currently loosing spec, and both will perish.
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I use OpenID every day. It's here and it works.
OpenID vs OpenPrivacy? (Score:2)
Re:If you're not OUTRAGED (Score:4, Funny)
Nothing wrong with this country. But on the other hand, I don't live in the US
Parent
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