Ignite Deux Seattle
Jackson Shaw on Scott Kveaton: “I have to say I was impressed. “
Jackson Shaw on Scott Kveaton: “I have to say I was impressed. “
Scott and I agree on a great many things, and I admire his work. But I still believe identity needs a three-dimensional approach in which protocol, payload and trust fabric are completely disentangled.
The sudden rise of OpenID shows exactly why we need a token-agnostic system. OpenID has great use cases that we all want to enable.
The root of the problem: if you want to protect anything of value, you need new kinds of client-side software
If you want to follow some of the threads of the convergence discussion, this list from tailrank.com will help
Another example of a great Web 2.0 opportunity going down the drain.
Running Apache? Drop in the module, change the httpd.conf and your application should have access to the claims in the InfoCard.
I felt we needed an objective criterion for deciding who to approach as representative of the OpenID community.
Gabe says, “the agendas here are amazingly open and transparent”
OpenID 2.0 is doing this in the blog / Web 2.0 world, others are coming at this from the enterprise space. We see these approaches as being complementary