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The case for claims-based identity management

The case for claims-based identity management

By:  Shane Schick  On: 08 Sep 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

B.C. CIO Dave Nikolejsin is putting his weight behind a new approach to verifying who someone is online and creating trusted services that promise to put the user back in control. Now he just has to convince everyone else in Canada.

Shanahan says such cultural shifts don’t happen overnight. “It took a long time for users to get used to user names and passwords,” he says. Nikolejsin characterizes the government’s challenge as departmentalism – the tendency in the public sector to work in little fiefdoms – and corporate self-interest in the private sector. On the other hand, he says he was swarmed by people after his Lac Carling presentation with questions.

“There were two dimensions to the response. One was the program people – they get it. They understand that they can’t be responsible for this identity thing,” he says. “The other is the municipalities. They see themselves on both sides of the equation – they need big governments to stand up the architecture so they can draw down on those services.”

So far, however, there needs to be more action on the provincial or federal level, and that’s not happening. Nikolejsin suggests opinion is fractured. “Alberta is on the fence, and Ontario and the feds are headed in a different direction,” he says. “It’s not to say I’m right and they’re wrong. It’s just that we’ve made the decision that we need to be in the identity services game. They worry about the authentication.” (The federal government’s Treasury Board Secretariat did not respond to interview requests for this article.)

CIOs should take the time to test the claims-based approach now, Ruddy says, so as to be ready to make their business case.

“It’s the same best practices as with any project – find a Web site that’s relatively low-risk and put together a pilot for that,” she says. “Then you get some hands-on experience, you understand the issues a bit better, and there are plenty of folks that would be happy to help you with that.” Kreizman says the launch of Windows 7 will mean some of the claims-based technology will be built-in, so as organizations slowly upgrade a CardSpace rollout might be easier.

Carving out money for pilots from other parts of the budget might be the toughest initial step, Nikolejsin says, but one worth the effort. In the meantime, he’s prepared to keep beating the drum until more people are willing to listen.

“We’re all dreaming the same dream. It’s irrefutably correct that we all want to get services online,” he says. “Once we get (the identity part) figured out, the truly high-value services will come on board – and we’ll suddenly get a populace that’s ready and willing to use the services.”

As long as they’re ready and willing to manage their own identities, too.










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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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