Grounds for Identity

by Doc Searls

A year ago, identity was mostly the concern of privacy and crypto guys. The only company taking much public interest was Microsoft, which was busy scaring everybody with its Passport identity management system and the Hailstorm initiative that went along with it. (Microsoft folks tell me they never meant to scare anybody. Privately they refer to Passport as "Piñata" because of all the bashing it takes.)

But over the next three quarters, identity became a big deal, certified by its own high-profile web site and tradeshow: Digital ID World (DIDW). The first DIDW took place in Denver in early October 2002. It was well-run and well-attended for a first effort by people who were, for the most part, new to the business. Those people included PingID.com, which is the commercial counterpart of PingID.org, an open-source effort.

When Don Marti got a look at advance promotion for DIDW, he called the speaker lineup "scary": a lot of big companies and associations (Microsoft and the Sun-led Liberty Alliance, for starters); a lot of small companies trying to sell stuff to big enterprise customers; and almost nobody representing individual interests (especially privacy). Except for me. And frankly, I had to push to get myself added to the speaker lineup, which I did through my position on the advisory board of PingID.

At the show I made as much trouble as I could. On the opening day I moderated a panel on identity and open source. On the closing day I gave a talk about the open-source nature of internet infrastructure--the need for open identity protocols and other standards that commercial interests alone would be unlikely to provide. I presented a slide that compiled a list of phrases assembled from buzzwords I heard in one talk after another at the show:

  • metadata control exchange system

  • partnership compliance implementation audit

  • self-addressing portable entitlement chain

  • DRM privacy directive store

  • self-regulating feedback mechanism

  • persistent federated domain logic audit

  • enterprise portal crossover

  • cross domain global security management protocol framework

  • custody containment certificate

  • logical domain root browser function

Driving this droning was a default assumption that identity could be managed and controlled--in spite of the fact that the Net is neither. At the end of my open-source panel, Brent Glass said this from the audience (quoting notes taken by another audience member):

I don't want any organization having control of my identity. I don't trust enterprises. I don't trust the government. I want to be the center of my identity. One of the things open source has going for it is it puts the user at the center. Could the panel explain if it can do this for us? Can it give humans control that need not be relinquished?

I believe the answer is yes. But to explain how, I'll start with some history. Back in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Craig Burton, Jamie Lewis and other Novell veterans at The Burton Group quietly changed the way we conceived networks, shifting us from a technical to a service model. Thanks to TBG's efforts, we began talking about networks as collections of interoperable services, including directory, security, management, file, print and messaging. At first the "network services model" was applied to LANs and enterprise systems such as Lotus Notes. But when the Internet began to lithify and support almost everything, the model applied there as well. Protocols such as TCP/IP, HTTP, SMTP, IMAP, POP3, LDAP and DHCP not only define the Net's working infrastructure but also provide its services.

Compared to even an old commercial LAN like Novell's NetWare, the Net's roster of services are still primitive and few. In fact, their primitive nature helps account for much of their ubiquitous adoption. Openness and simplicity are good things to have in protocols. But the fewness of network services on the Net is another matter. If "the history of the Internet is the history of its protocols", as Vint Cerf says, we're still in the Paleozoic era. For example, there still are no common protocols for printing over the Net. Directory services are minimal (DNS covers few bases and LDAP only covers directory access). Aside from e-mail, messaging is a mess. Jabber's IM protocols are widely adopted, but hardly ubiquitous. Thanks to AOL's and Microsoft's childish refusal to interoperate with each other, instant messaging for most of us remains stuck at the Prodigy vs. Compuserve stage. But if IM is an embryo, ID is an unfertilized egg.

To shift metaphors in a botanical direction, think of the Net as Mother Earth and all this corporate droning as seed thrown on dry ground. What's more, the enthusiastic seed spilling at DIDW reminded me of every other cycle of enthusiasm launched whenever the ground starts to shake. Big companies and governments try to protect and extend the existing order while startups wage a leadership revolution. Both miss the fact that all Net-based architectures, old and new, are grounded on a geology that nobody owns, everybody can use and anybody can improve.

Today big business operates by the grace of the Net. The creators of the Net--the makers of ubiquitous protocols that are as central and beyond ownership as the core of the Earth--are the gods behind the primal forces of today's business world. Those gods still have work to do, as veteran Byte editor John Udell explains:

The connected computer is fast approaching ubiquity. We've created cyberspace, but we haven't yet really colonized it because we lack the organizing principle to do so. Having abolished time and space, nothing remains but identity. How we project our identities into cyberspace is the central riddle. Until we solve that, we can't move on.

Project is the right word, not protect.

If we create the protocols, APIs and other standards that let customers relate at full power with the companies they choose, consumer becomes an obsolete noun. The companies now in full charge of the identities they confer on each of us will no longer have full control, because now they will have to relate and not just distribute. But because we show up as customers rather than as consumers, the range of business possibilities is much larger. The trade-off is a good one for both sides.

But it won't begin until we get those protocols and APIs, which won't happen unless somebody decides to write them for everybody. Maybe that effort will come from the noncommercial world, as it did with HTTP and SMTP. Or maybe it will come from the altruistic side of the commercial world, as it did with SOAP and RSS.

My guess is that it will come from both, as it does with Linux (if we give full credit to the companies that employ the developers who continue to improve code that nobody owns and everybody can use). Once it does, there will be real grounds for enthusiasm.

Doc Searls is senior editor of Linux Journal.

email: doc@ssc.com

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