Microsoft announces OpenID support in CardSpace
By Simon Bisson,
Microsoft has announced plans to support the OpenID authentication platform as part of its CardSpace digital identity technology.
Speaking at the RSA Conference in San Francisco, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates outlined the company's refreshed identity strategy - including support in Windows CardSpace for the OpenID 2.0 identity standard. As part of an interoperability agreement OpenID will also be extended to handle phishing-resistant credentials, adding a new layer of trust to ecommerce sites.
Originally designed by Brad Fitzpatrick, chief architect at blogging platform developer Six Apart for use in cross-blog authentication, OpenID has rapidly become a key digital identity technology, allowing identity assertions to be shared across multiple systems. While other identity systems work well in closed enterprise networks, OpenID has been designed from the ground up for handling identity on the public internet. Microsoft's collaboration with the OpenID project will add support for strong credentials. As many sites and services already use OpenID, this approach will open up much more of the web to Microsoft's fledgling CardSpace.
Key open source developers have welcomed the news; Fitzpatrick described Microsoft's involvement in the project as "great". OpenID can already use Kerberos, voiceprints, and Jabber JID as authentication components, and he sees CardSpace as another authentication technology. CardSpace authentication will bring OpenID support for the WS-Trust web service standard, and Microsoft will be supporting OpenID in future identity server products.
Microsoft's Chief Architect of Identity Kim Cameron calls OpenID "a really great technology for doing public identities - the simplicity is stunning" and suggests that "It's one of the things that will really drive us towards the identity Big Bang. And the whole world will benefit."
Sxip Identity's Dick Hardt agrees that this is a major endorsement of OpenID, and Sxip will be working with Microsoft to add CardSpace Information Card support to their existing OpenID products. These include an open source distributed identity plug-in for any web site, and a range of identity appliances that provide identity management and integration tools for businesses. Other partners include JanRain, which supplies the code many web sites use to work with OpenID, and Verisign.
Kim Cameron has described the solution to the problem of identity as a metasystem, where different technologies cooperate to share assertions and authentications. OpenID is part of this identity metasystem, and has already converged with technologies like Yadis, XRI and Sxip. Its strength lies in its wide adoption by so many different platforms and technologies There have been concerns about Microsoft's involvement with the OpenID specification, but Cameron and the OpenID are both convinced that Microsoft will not exert undue influence.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Security Analysis & Insight
What is your password worth?
Would you be tempted to sell off company passwords for a fee? If not, seems like you're in the minority, acccording to research.
- Macs under attack?
- Intel: security inside
- Are you spending too much on IT security?
- Does the government want to snoop on your data?
- Eurocrats versus the cyber criminals
- The truth about spam
- Google and privacy: What’s the problem?
- Q&A: Symantec’s CISO on the source code hack
- RSA: Back from the breach?
Latest Security Reviews
Check Point 2210 Appliance review
Rating: ![]()
advertisement
Most popular
- IBM bans use of Siri on iPhones
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Ultrabook review : First look
- Chromebooks: What's gone wrong?
- HP plans massive job cuts
- Google: Government controls are the internet's biggest threat
- Macs and Android under malware threat
- Sony Vaio T13 Ultrabook review: First look
- RIM loses its head of sales
- ARM-based Windows 8 tablets facing delays
Latest News Videos in Security
IT PRO Podcast: Are UK data protection laws flawed?
We bring in two experts to talk about the problems with UK data protection law and the way it is managed.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





