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  • I smuggled a neologism... or did I?

    Back in October 2005, few weeks after I moved to the US, I wrote a blog post in which I introduced the idea of a collective name for the federated resources accessible to a company. One of the names I proposed was federnet . At the time I made a quick search on the Internet to see if anybody was already using the term for something of the sort, but nobody appeared to. Well, I actually used the term in the book ; I don't know how I managed to get it past the severe reviewers of AW, but I did! :-) Now: since it appears on a publication, with its nice ISBN & classification according to the Library of Congress, I am tempted to say that it made a further step in the long road toward inclusion. We are still far from Merriam Webster or even just wikipedia , of course, but hey... you never know ;-) Before writing this post I made a short search on the term, just to see if it enjoyed any uptake, and I was pretty surprised to find an article on the CIO Magazine website that mentions the term federnet! The article, with a date almost a year after my blog post (the website says September the 13th, 2006), takes the consumer angle and a way more centralized approach, but its results are not too different from mine after all (use of standards, benefits of federation). It even mentions intranet and Internet vs federnet (though they are mentioned for assonance reasons, rather than conceptual kinship). I am sure that at the time a query for "federnet" on any search engine would have brought Read More...
  • Year's end blabbering: Omnidirectional Identities

    On the Paris-Seattle flight, coming back after 2 weeks spent stuffing myself with all sorts of food with the excuse "after all, you can't find this in USA" :) Before hurling myself back in the vortex of daily work, and celebrate the end of the year with something crazy, I want to take some time writing down some hallucinatory (=vision without execution) thoughts about omnidirectional identities . Be warned, this may be just pointless rambling at this point. Few weeks ago I chatted about this in front of a microphone with John Udell , digressing along a crazy tangent instead of answering his questions about the book (I eventually came back to Earth and answered properly :)). I don't know if he'll deem those fragments publication worthy, but just in case I'll make a brain dump here. It's not that there's much more to do in this small seat anyway (just finished the latest Eco . He didn't mention underbite at all, I'm happy). Looking back at the activities related to identity in the past year, I am glad to report that amazing progress has been done. Something that makes 2007 very different from 2006 is the kind of work that was made: in 2007 the accent was on execution. The vision behind the metasystem is still being explored, sure, like Kim's series on linkage or the discussions about display token and first law demonstrate; and I feel that conjugating the metasystem and claims in enterprise environment is an area that still need focus (especially in fighting old forma mentis that Read More...
  • Identity Theft: The Michelle Brown Story

    When something is part of your daily experience, it's really hard to think that for somebody else it could be uncommon or even bizarre. For some of my American friends it is really hard to imagine that somebody may not know what Fred Mayer is (<ItalianCaption>Una catena di supermercati , niente di esoterico</ItalianCaption>), while for an Italian is pretty hard to figure out how in every movie the bad guy can enter a house without forcing the door (usually the house door in Italy is self-locking: once you leave the house and close it, you need the keys if you want to re-enter). One consequence of that is that certain phenomena are not always explained in a way that results understandable by everybody, exactly because we tend to rely on so much assumed knowledge from the audience. Th entire idea of identity theft (and identity crime, a different animal) is a good example: here in the States the knowledge of certain personal data (addresses, document numbers...) allow the thieves to perform stunts impossible elsewhere, such as opening bank accounts in the name of the victim and buying by credit, opening mail boxes for illicit traffic, starting credit cards... the list is long. The danger of somebody digging in you phisical mail is high: and you receive surprisingly risky junk mail, inlcuding preapproved credit cards in your name that anybody can steal, activate and use until it gets you in troubles. All those things can be explained, but for gaining an intuitive grasp Read More...

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