At the Digital ID World (DIDW) conference this week in San Francisco, the Liberty Alliance announced the winners of the second annual IDDY Awards. The winners were:
- eBiz.Mobility, for a in interoperable 'one-touch' online mobile payments service;
- the New Zealand Government, for its user-centric identity management framework for transformational government;
- NTT Labs, for SASSO - a mobile-phone based strong authentication module;
- Reardon Commerce, for their Personal Assistant - delivered using "Software as a Service" principles.
You can read the details and find supporting case study materials here.
It's fascinating to see these things developing over the course of a couple of years, and having had the privilege of being on the judging panel both years, I'm gratified and impressed at the way in which, on the one hand, leading-edge technology has evolved into large-scale implementations, while on the other hand, innovation continues and new implementation opportunities continue to open up.
Innovation begets innovation...
Posted by racingsnake
@ 01:13 PM GMT+00:00
Amnesty International's "Protect The Human" week will start on Oct 13th 2007; also during that week, Amnesty will launch its "unsubscribe" campaign. This paragraph from the "unsubscribe" website sums up the campaign succinctly:
"In Jordan a teenage boy is dragged along the ground behind a Toyota pick-up truck.
In Gambia a man is seized by masked men, hooded, bound, flown to an unknown destination and tortured. In Morocco a UK resident reports being detained and cut with a scalpel all over his body.
The ‘excuse’ given for each of these abuses can be summed up in four words – ‘the war on terror’. It’s an excuse used not only by countries allied to the US – such as Pakistan and Jordan - but also by countries with their own very specific agendas to pursue. From the giants of China and Russia to the east African state of Eritrea, the ‘war on terror’ has come to be seen as a green light of approval to
secret detention, ‘disappearances’ and torture.
Since the attacks on the USA on 11 September 2001 and the subsequent 'war on terror' we have been calling on governments to respect human rights in their counter-terrorism efforts. At first many ignored us, but there is now a growing realisation that security cannot be achieved by resorting to unlawful practices. We demand an end to these practices, an end to impunity and a respect for human rights."
To find out more about how to unsubscribe, and what it is you're unsubscribing from, visit the website here. There are also downloadable website widgets and buttons, and tips on how to unsubscribe through Web 2.0: Bebo, Myspaec, Facebook, Flickr and Second Life will all be hosting various forms of unsubscription.
Posted by racingsnake
@ 12:11 PM GMT+00:00
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