Looks fine. A bunch of small cleanup items below. >> little corners of the >> internet<http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rip_openid_janrain_raises_millions_to_do_just_the.php> expand the hyperlink to include the l
>> preso is at change to "presentation on" >> OpenID Connect, like OAuth 2.0 Make OpenID Connect link to http://openid.net/2011/07/15/current-map-for-openid-connect/ >> from Google, Microsoft and Facebook. change to "from companies like" >> small companies will do. We can see where they invest. change to "small companies will do, we can see where they invest." >> those ChuckM described. change to "Chuck Mortimore" >> at a OpenID Summit change to "at an OpenID Summit" >> Mountain View CA at Microsoft's offices >> <http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/labs/siliconvalley/default.aspx> the OpenID Foundation will be hosting a technical interop and testing workshop for engineers and developers interested in OpenID Connect. Split the sentence so it ends after the hyperlink, i.e. ""... Mountain View CA at Microsoft's offices<http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/labs/siliconvalley/default.aspx>. The OpenID Foundation will be hosting a technical interop and testing workshop for engineers and developers interested in OpenID Connect." Lets also add a sentence at the end of the paragraph that says "There will also be sessions for website operators who want to learn more about why they should get out of the password business and integrate with identity providers. Information on how to register for the event will be posted soon." >> In other words, wether bearish or bullish don't touch the remote, stay tuned for more of the very ambitious, widely discussed project called OpenID Connect. <http://openid.net/2011/07/15/current-map-for-openid-connect/> "wether" should be "whether" and need a comma after bullish I am also uncomfortable with how the end of this sentence that is so protocol specific, when we know that most of the big IDPs are more likely to use OpenID Connect-"like" flows on top of OAuth. Can we simply change the end to say "In other words, whether bearish or bullish, don't touch the remote, stay tuned for more in the evolution of the OpenID. On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 8:54 AM, Don Thibeau <[email protected]> wrote: > All: > > One of the topics discussed recently at Ping Identity's OpenID Summit at > its Cloud Identity Conference and again at last week's Gartner Catalyst > conference was a "consumerisation of the > enterprise"<http://www.callcentreclinic.com/news/technology/the-consumerisation-of-the-enterprise-a-holistic-approach-to-the-social-media-generation-45361.htm> > or > IT trend. OpenID was at the center of those discussions as technology bulls > and bears debated its value in both enterprise and consumer use cases. > OpenID's evolution from little corners of the > internet<http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rip_openid_janrain_raises_millions_to_do_just_the.php> > to > mainstream adoption tracks the changes in internet identity best understood > in hindsight. One leading edge adopter's review of how OpenID's user > centricity morphed to a provider centric architecture is seen in > Salesforce.com's Chuck Mortimore's blunt but bullish preso is at 'Does > OpenID work for the Enterprise?" <http://youtu.be/ZxVJnxJ2Rvg> > > In deciding wether one is bearish or bullish on OpenID it may be useful to > "follow the money" and follow the leaders. > > OpenID Connect, like OAuth 2.0, is among the few standards that has real > technical engagement from Google, Microsoft and Facebook. While no one can > predict what these companies, relying parties and small companies will do. > We can see where they invest. Wether at industry conferences or launching > pilots, industry leaders and developers like JanRain, Ping Identity and > others making multi year /multi million dollar bets on protocols like OpenID > Connect as it tracks with OAuth in enabling new claims and data centric > architectures. Following the money supports a bullish view of the value > beyond social/single sign-on in today's web. As noted companies like Ping > Identity, JanRain and others have raised significant funding to pursue > opportunities in this space. Analysts note a strong > demand<http://www.marketwatch.com/story/identive-group-announces-second-quarter-2011-results-2011-08-04?reflink=MW_news_stmp> > for > identity management solutions globally. > > Bears among us rightfully point to how OpenID has been quiet over the past > year as it adjusted to the new market conditions like those ChuckM > described. Sausage and standards making isn't pretty and takes a maddening > amount of time and money. Engineers, be they community volunteers or > "volunteered" by large industry leaders take care when re-architecting a > core offering like OpenID. Meanwhile OpenID Foundation members like > Symantec, PayPal, Google, and others continue to co-sponsor OpenID Summits > and other events with industry, where the evolution of OpenID is talked > about and its adoption continues to increase around the world. Although > OpenID may become more plumbing than the next big thing for the Silicon > Valley tech press, its premise and technological underpinnings are proving > to be solid and future-facing. > > Finally, take a look at the work being done at Google and the OpenID > Foundation <http://openid.net/foundation/> on the Account > Chooser<http://sites.google.com/site/gitooldocs/experiment---account-chooser>, > a scalable, user-friendly way to bring OpenID technologies to the masses, > while still supporting a philosophy of decentralized, interoperable identity > solutions. Bears and Bulls can judge for themselves as OpenID Connect is > tried, tested and toughened at a OpenID Summit hosted by Microsoft on > September 12 and 13 in Mountain View CA at Microsoft's offices > <http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/labs/siliconvalley/default.aspx> the > OpenID Foundation will be hosting a technical interop and testing workshop > for engineers and developers interested in OpenID Connect. > > In other words, wether bearish or bullish don't touch the remote, stay > tuned for more of the very ambitious, widely discussed project called OpenID > Connect. <http://openid.net/2011/07/15/current-map-for-openid-connect/> > > > Don Thibeau > Executive Director > OpenID.net > > > On Aug 3, 2011, at 10:37 AM, Chris Messina wrote: > > Tough article to read: > > > readwriteweb.com/archives/rip_openid_janrain_raises_millions_to_do_just_the.php<http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rip_openid_janrain_raises_millions_to_do_just_the.php> > Especially in light of the work on OpenID Connect, do we have a response? > > Chris > > -- > Chris Messina > Developer Advocate, Google > > //chrismessina.me <http://chrismessina.me/> | > +<https://plus.google.com/102034052532213921839>| > @chrismessina <http://twitter.com/chrismessina> > > This email is: [ ] shareable [X] ask first [ ] private > _______________________________________________ > board mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-board > > > _______________________________________________ > board mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.openid.net/mailman/listinfo/openid-board > > -- Eric Sachs | Senior Product Manager | [email protected]
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