Member Sign In
Not a member?

A Wired.com user account lets you create, edit and comment on Webmonkey articles. You will also be able to contribute to the Wired How-To Wiki and comment on news stories at Wired.com.


It's fast and free.

Sign in with OpenID
Sign In
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...
Join Webmonkey

Please send me occasional e-mail updates about new features and special offers from Wired/Webmonkey.
Yes No

Please send occasional e-mail offers from Wired/Webmonkey affiliated web sites and publications, and carefully selected companies.
Yes No

I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to Webmonkey's User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Retrieve Sign In

Please enter your e-mail address or username below. Your username and password will be sent to the e-mail address you provided us.

or
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Welcome to Webmonkey

A private profile page has been created for you.
As a member of Webmonkey, you can now:
  • edit articles
  • add to the code library
  • design and write a tutorial
  • comment on any Webmonkey article
Close
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

Sign In Information Sent

An e-mail has been sent to the e-mail address registered in this account.
If you cannot find it in your in-box, please check your bulk or junk folders.
Sign In
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

Sun Shines Light On OpenID

250pxopenid_logosvgSun has announced it will start supporting OpenID, but with a unique twist. Sun won’t be offering a consumer solution, rather it’s starting with its own employees.

With Microsoft, Yahoo, AOl and others embracing OpenID one might wonder why Sun’s rather limited foray warrants attention, but the difference is in how Sun is using OpenID.

Tim Bray writes on his blog:

Unfortunately, at the moment, it isn’t good for much, because the OpenID might be pointing at a server that’s evil or silly. It’s good enough for blog comments and that’s about it.

What’s more interesting is that we’re rolling out an OpenID provider, but with a twist: You can’t get an OpenID there unless you’re a Sun employee, and if someone offers an OpenID whose URI is there, and it authenticates, you can be really sure that they’re a Sun employee. It doesn’t tell you their name or address or anything else; that’s up to the individual to provide (or not). The authentication relies on our Access Manager product, and it’s pretty strong; employees here have to use those crypto-magic SecureCard token generators for serious authentication, passwords aren’t good enough.

Sun is the first company to use OpenID as an employee tool. Others, like Microsoft’s OpenId support in Vista, are consumer tools used primarily by the bleeding edge of the techno elite. And as Bray points out, most consumer tools are problematic in an enterprise system.

But what Sun is doing could well move OpenID from handy tool for those in know, to something with real world practicality for companies concerned about security, yet wanting to keep the process of verifying identity simple and easy-to-use.

With more companies eyeing online enterprise apps as a viable solution, something like Sun’s OpenID project is fast becoming a necessity.

And Sun has long history of pioneering moves in the digital identity realm. From the Liberty Alliance project to today’s OpenID announcement, Sun has long led the way for companies and others looking to establish secure and effective ways of managing identity.

[via O’Reilly Radar]

Post Comment Comments Permalink Print
Reddit Digg

 
Subscribe now

Special Offer For Webmonkey Users

WIRED magazine:
The first word on how technology is changing our world.

Subscribe for just $10 a year