Tim

The OpenID Foundation, like many organizations, has been a beneficiary of the 
Gov 2.0 Summit and now the CityCamp Exchange in Chicago. Key to the 
government's adoption of OpenID was the forcing function Gov 2.0 provided last 
fall.  Vivek Kundra deserves credit for seizing the Gov2.0 opportunity to 
leverage OpenID's widespread adoption in the service of the Obama 
administration's open government agenda. 

Many on the board share your view that the real promise of Kundra's "Open 
Identity for Open Government" initiative can be its impact at the state and 
local level, because as you point out it's where the rubber meets the road on 
citizen services.  As you say, it's an area of government that has the ability 
(unlike the federal level) to run experiments in parallel deserves the 
attention of open source protocol foundations like the OpenID Foundation and 
others. 

We are starting a dialogue with the State of California's CIO’s senior 
architects' efforts to create a digital identity for its citizens and 
certifying those identities. They have an interest in learning about the 
efforts of the OpenID Foundation at a Federal level in regards to certification 
and wanted to make sure CA's efforts at the State level were in concert with 
those of the Feds. This mirrors activity in British Columbia and reflects your 
interests in how states and cities can share best practices, data, and code.  
The Foundations' mission around adoption dovetails with the information sharing 
you've championed and to not only avoid reinventing the wheel, but promoting 
open source identity standards by connecting the OpenID community with other 
forward-thinking communities.

Speaking of forward thinking, I enjoyed talking with Len Lin with 
CodeforAmerica. They and the team from the City of Austin seemed invested in 
OpenID enabling Austin's new websites and modeling the idea that open identity 
for open government at the local level. I like your notion of the OpenID 
Foundation partnering as a platform provider with orgs like CodeforAmerica to 
create facilities that are used by citizens to create value for society. To use 
your iPhone app store example, we want the OpenID Foundation and the new Open 
Identity Exchange to be a platform for the private sector and governments at 
the federal state and local level to leverage its infrastructure, best 
practices and open source focus for the benefit of as wide a community as 
possible.

Thanks for yours and Steve's encouragement and leadership.

Don Thibeau
[email protected]
Executive Director
The OpenID Foundation
http://openid.net


-----Original Message-----
From: Tim O'Reilly [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, January 22, 2010 7:54 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CityCamp Exchange] Introductions

I'm the founder and CEO of O'Reilly Media, and the organizer of the  
Gov 2.0 Summit and Gov 2.0 Expo.  I'm also on the board of  
CodeforAmerica. I'm interesting in spreading the idea that the real  
opportunity for next-generation government is not just in the use of  
social media, or open government data, or web APIs, or mobile  
applications, but in thinking like a platform provider, who creates  
facilities that are used by citizens to create value for society.   
Like the iPhone app store, I hope to see government as a platform for  
citizen-created applications.

  It seems to me that the real promise of Gov 2.0 is going to evolve  
at the local level, both because it's where the rubber meets the road  
on citizen services, because it's more insulated from partisan  
gridlock, and because it's an area of government that has the ability  
(unlike the federal level) to run many experiments in parallel.

As part of that vision, I'm extremely interested in how cities can  
share best practices, data, and code.  While a robust marketplace for  
experimentation is a feature of local government, fragmentation is a  
real risk.  Information sharing will hopefully help us to avoid  
reinventing the wheel, begin to develop standards, and forge a  
community of forward-thinking communities.

Some contact details below.  Also see http://gov2events.com and 
http://codeforamerica.org

See you all tomorrow!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tim O'Reilly, Founder & CEO O'Reilly Media
1005 Gravenstein Highway North, Sebastopol, CA 95472
[email protected], http://radar.oreilly.com, http://twitter.com/timoreilly



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