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20070225 Sunday February 25, 2007

The OpenID Snowball

In case you haven't noticed, there's been an unmistakable groundswell around OpenID in recent months. The proliferation of new web 2.0 services and the resulting "password fatigue" (except for those who are using OpenID) are contributing mass to the movement but the adoption of OpenID by established services (Technorati, Digg) and big players (AOL, Microsoft) are catalyzing acceleration. I'll cite these headlines as evidence:

Tim Bray raised a lot of great questions about OpenID. I'll summarize a response by simply saying that one of the virtues of using OpenID for URL-based user-centric authentication is the granularity of control available, it's all "opt-in":

  1. relying parties can maintain their own white/black listing policies for identity providers, define what user attributes they require, etc
  2. users are in control of who they allow their identity provider to provide URL ownership verification to, which of their attributes are allowed to be shared, etc
  3. the identity provider can implement policies around which relying parties they'll authenticate for or send user attributes to

Given current implementations, I'm probably not ready to use OpenID for online banking or verification that I'm old enough to buy wine (but I'll be grateful if you ask, I miss getting carded). However, I see no reason why the standards and practices can't be advanced to support those activities. The potential for phishing and man-in-the-middle attacks are a concern but there a lot of applications today where there are many benefits to the opting-in parties but few for the attacker.

Right now, if Tim's comment authentication system was OpenID-enabled, I'd be able to use my Technorati profile URL (http://technorati.com/profile/spidaman) to sign-in to post a comment on his blog. For "low-gravity" authentication requirements (blog comments), OpenID works great, today. For more rigorous authentication , user-attribute verification and trust requirements (like credit score lookups) there's a lot of great discussion underway. What I find heartening is that there seems to be broad acceptance of the Laws of Identity and increasing understanding that there's a big difference between the identity requirements for uploading photos and trading stocks in your IRA account.

URL-based authentication will likely go through the same growing pains raised by using email addresses to identify people. Back in the day when there were email addresses that people paid for and those were distinguishable from free ones, mailing list policies against subscribers with, say, hotmail addresses were often implemented. We may be approaching an era where some URLs are more equal than others, I dunno. But in the meantime, there's a lot of useful services you can use with OpenID today. If you haven't tried OpenID, do so right now by logging in to your Technorati account and then use your profile URL to log into Zooomr; this stuff is easier to use than it is to explain. I wouldn't be surprised if Yahoo! and/or Google get on the bus in the next few months. As the snowball gains mass, you should know how and when to utilize user-centric authentication systems such as OpenID.

               

( Feb 25 2007, 08:17:17 AM PST ) Permalink


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