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OpenID gains support for online single sign-on

OpenID gains support for online single sign-on

By:  Shane Schick  On: 07 Feb 2008 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

IBM, VeriSign and the major search firms are all backing a framework that would ease the user name and password hassles. Officials explain why this time it might actually work

A decision by major vendors like Microsoft and Google to support an online single sign-on project may mean IT managers need to reconsider their identity management strategy.

The OpenID Foundation on Thursday said VeriSign and Yahoo have also become members of its board, offering a major boost towards a system that aims to use one user name and password combination to access a variety of Web sites. OpenID, which was started by LiveJournal creator Brad Fitzpatrick, claims more than 10,000 Web sites have implemented its framework. The support of Yahoo will substantially increase its potential user base, as the search and portal firm said its 248 million active registered users could use their logins on other OpenID sites last month.

“It’s evidence that there is new identity layer of the Web that is emergent and that really needs to be attended to and built up in a way that works for everybody,” OpenID Foundation executive director Bill Washburn said. “A lot of the work that’s happened with OpenID is from real young, excited and obviously highly intelligent individuals who are in that place where they don’t know it can’t be done, so they go ahead and do it.”

Nico Popp, VeriSign’s vice-president of innovation, said his organization has been unofficially involved with OpenID for two years, contributing to open source libraries and working on the specification. The reason the members are going public now, he said, is that they have finally come to an agreement on how to handle intellectual property related to the framework’s development.

The idea of an online single sign-on has been something of an IT industry Holy Grail. Microsoft tried, and failed, to develop a platform called Passport, while Sun Microsystems and private sector firms like the Royal Bank of Canada formed a coalition called the Liberty Alliance to achieve similar objectives.

“A lot of these things didn’t have a grassroots effort,” Popp observed. “It was either the vendors, or a big company trying to do that on its own.” Anthony Nadalin, chief security architect for IBM Tivoli software, noted that previous efforts around online ID management were focused on the enterprise, whereas OpenID is more of a consumer play. That said, everyday individuals will no doubt use such systems at work, which means IT managers will need to pay close attention to it.

“I don’t think you’re going to see enterprises go out and change the PKI infrastructure in their shops,” he said. “There needs to be some bridging that happens between OpenID and what happens on the back end as far as access to applications. And it should be done in a seamless way.”


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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