From
http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/news/2008/04/microsoft, never
heard of it, can't seem to find much about it.
anonymous wrote :
| In a move that could extend its already substantial presence in the realm of identity
access and management, the software giant recently announced it had acquired the patents
to the U-Prove technology developed by cryptographer Stefan Brands and his colleagues at
the Montreal startup, Credentica.
|
| Implemented properly, the U-Prove algorithms could allow users to exercise absolute
control over the information they release online; guarantee that whatever information they
did release would not linger indefinitely; and make it impossible to hack, link or trace
that information back to them.
|
| Unlike other privacy solutions, including Microsoft's current CardSpace system,
U-Prove guarantees a user's privacy even in the face of collusion by identity
providers and relying parties -- the very organizations that certify our online identities
and require us to prove them.
|
| "It allows single sign-on, without every site you sign onto being able to link
your account with every other site you sign onto," British privacy guru Ben Laurie
writes in an e-mail interview.
|
| Many privacy experts see the acquisition as a shrewd move by the company, and a good
thing for online privacy in general. Yet some have also voiced concern that Microsoft
might lock Brands' algorithms into what Laurie calls a "proprietary
Microsoft-technology silo."
|
| Both Brands and Kim Cameron, Microsoft's chief identity architect, are trying to
assuage those fears.
|
| According to Cameron, the company wants to ensure interoperability between Microsoft
and non-Microsoft privacy platforms, and has no intention of hoarding U-Prove. Cameron
intends to integrate Brands' algorithms into Microsoft's existing
identity-access-and-management platform by mid-2009, and plans to open the application
programming interface to the world.
|
| Moreover, Brands says Microsoft is placing the technology under its Open Specification
Promise, which amounts to a pledge not to sue anyone for patent infringement unless
someone tries to sue Microsoft first. The intention, he says, is "to make it possible
for anyone to use this technology whether they use Windows or not."
|
| ...
|
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