One of the things I’ve found about trying to figure out identity management concepts and technology is that there are lots of nuances, lots of things to worry about, and it tends to make you more wary (which I guess is all to the good). I now am more careful about whether websites have believable privacy policies before I sign up for them, I have a number of free email accounts for the sole purpose of getting newsletters or registering at websites, and I more often figure the information on these websites is unlikely to be worth the effort.
It’s exciting though, being part of something that is important and where people are realising the importance more day by day, sort of like XML in the early days where people starting saying, yes I do have that problem and maybe this technology can help solve it. So part of what I hope to do in the coming year is help the Liberty Alliance figure out how to help people learn what they need to know about some of these concepts, technologies, and specifications. Identity management is starting to expand beyond the “in group” now as more people start to realise the importance of building it (and security) into systems from the beginning rather than trying to bolt it on afterwards. Figuring identity out takes time – identity management is inherently complex (well, more complex than XML, anyway ;-)) and although Einstein’s famous quote says things should be made as simple as possible, it also says “but not simpler”.
One of the things that Liberty does to tell people about Liberty-related aspects of identity is to host webcasts on a regular basis. This month’s is on the People Service:
The Liberty ID-WSF People Service, a key component in ID-WSF 2.0, is the industry’s first comprehensive platform for managing social information within an open federated network environment. People Service allows consumers and enterprise users to manage social applications such as bookmarks, blogging, calendars, photo sharing and instant messaging from a common layer within the ID-WSF 2.0 framework. Liberty People Service has been developed to allow individuals to easily store, maintain, and categorize online relationships so that other socially-aware Web services applications can leverage information based on the consent and privacy controls established by a user in the federated social network. With Liberty Alliance People Service, consumers and enterprise users can now centrally manage all of their online social relationships using a federated network approach with privacy controls built into the system allowing users to leverage the privacy functionality of Liberty Web Services to more easily and securely share social and enterprise information across applications, platforms and service providers. In this Web cast, we’ll overview the functionality of People Service and provide some use case examples. You won’t want to miss this highly informative session.
The webcast is on this coming Wednesday (January 11, 2006) at 8 am Pacific; if you’re thinking of listening in please register soon (preferably by Monday) so there will be enough phone lines booked.