Open Networks, Closed Regimes
Title
OpenId and Internet Governance
- One of the other groups has a fun title (all together now for great justice dot org). Can we have one too? --Dan
- Once exams end. --Joshua
Precis
- Internet Regulation (as it relates specifically to online safety and security)
- Privacy and anonymity as they relate to structures of control on the Internet
- JZ: I like the idea of a case study, because the topic is too big otherwise. Would not mind someone from openID or even 2 competing groups talk about what they offer, and identify a problem that gives one of them a headache. My guesses on headaches:
- At what layer of the internet is appropriate for identity?
- How do you achieve critical mass, do you need the help of government or the help of something that's more than just the market?
- Groups to look at, potentially:
- OpenID
- Higgins project
- Trustfuse (Auren Hoffman)
- And then see which group is most interesting and bring them in. The problem ID architecture is meant to solve - what is it? What are the new problems it creates? What are the barriers to implementing this solution?
Guest wish list (if any)
- As an academic, you couldn't do better than Daniel Solove. If we do hone in on a very specific topic, though, we could go for someone with more specialized experience. Dan Ray 22:39, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
- Although government is subject to all sorts of special legal provisos that the private sector doesn't have to manage, the privacy counsel at DHS, Hugo Teufel, is pretty on top of his game. If we're looking for practitioners, Ron Lee of Arnold & Porter does work with private industry.
- If we do OpenID, options for guests might include Bill Washburn of the OpenID Foundation and DeWitt Clinton of Google.
- Also, since Passport has foundered, Facebook Connect looks like the hot new thing on the proprietary side. Whoever runs that for Facebook would be a natural invite as well. (see Dan's links below (?))
- And I still think the potential for the mobile phone to become the heretofore mythical convergence device and thus to become a necessary adjunct to personal identity is worth talking over.
Perhaps a bloggingheads.tv-style video conference call between someone from an electronic privacy nonprofit and a representative from Microsoft or Facebook?
Readings
James Grimmelmann, Facebook and The Social Dyanmics of Privacy
Solove, Daniel J. "'I've Got Nothing to Hide' and Other Misunderstandings of Privacy"
Links & Articles
http://vizedu.com/2008/12/lifestreaming-what-why-and-how/
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/125/how-to-fix-the-web.html
http://developers.facebook.com/connect.php
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_connect_vs_open_id.php
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_connect_readies.php
http://chrissaad.wordpress.com/2008/12/01/facebook-connect-aka-hailstorm-20/
http://wiki.openid.net/Lobbying
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/11/30/facebook-google-myspace-data/
http://blog.socialmedia.com/slowly-reprogramming-the-web-for-social-networks/
http://gigaom.com/2008/11/30/social-webs-big-question-federate-or-aggregate/
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10110382-2.html
Concrete question(s) of the week
What specific privacy expectations should be articulated to the groups who control the future of OpenID?
Anything else material towards planning your topic
- Facebook + google people?
- another way to look at it is as a matter of cybercrime and such - new surveillence methods (also relevant in regards to child pornography, for example). i wander if these are too different topics or not. Ayelet
- I'd like to see a segment on what "privacy" actually means in law and in culture. This would probably attach well to any other, more applied segment. Dan Ray 16:38, 3 December 2008 (EST)
- Creating a series of Privacy Certification Marks