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PayPal’s plans for a single consumer identity

PayPal’s plans for a single consumer identity By:  Jennifer Kavur On: 09 Oct 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Senior director of Identity Services Andrew Nash presents PayPal’s expansion into the identity provider space at a SecTor keynote in Toronto. Plus, Isaac Azimov's rules for IDPs



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PayPal Inc. is on the road to becoming the “Visa” of the Internet, according to a keynote speech at SecTor in Toronto, where Andrew Nash presented the company’s plans to expand into the identity provider business.

The term identity provider (IDP) has existed in the identity technology space, but the actual implementation for consumers is just beginning, explained Nash, PayPal’s senior director of identity services, in a post-keynote interview.

“Identity providers in the case we are talking about are actually an entity that creates credentials, establishes who you are, manages the lifecycle of those credentials and acts as a conduit for attributes and controls policy associated with how your identity could be used,” said Nash.

Consumers would essentially have a single online identity for accessing sites and conducting business online. This would remove the need for filling out forms and entering passwords as you travel around the Net.  

“We would enable the use of a credential against the various sites you are going to and basically give you the ability to control whether or not that site would make use of that credential or ask for additional information,” Nash explained.

PayPal would essentially act as a broker between consumers and enterprise. “At some level, we are kind of a little bit like the Visa of the credit card system,” he said.

Nash expects competition, but PayPal has already established a level of trust from financial and commercial institutions. “We aren’t the only ones, but we are at this point the only ones that already have reasonable level of trust associated with the identities,” he said.

With over 193 million accounts worldwide, PayPal has a significant head start in the space, according to Nash. “That’s a huge percentage of people who shop on the Internet who we already represent,” he said. 

Technology is not the issue right now, said Nash. PayPal has already answered questions at the technology level, such as how to protect identities and ensure information is not externally shared or subverted, he explained.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur is a senior writer for Computer World Canada.

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Comments (1)

laurie chasse
10/13/2009 3:26:56 PM

This is a very interesting article.

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