By
Joris Evers
Monday, February 27 2006 06:15 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39315148,00.htm
IBM and Novell on Monday are expected to announce an open-source response
to Microsoft's forthcoming InfoCard identity management technology.
The companies plan to contribute to an open-source initiative code-named Higgins Project. The project aims to help users manage the
plethora of Internet logins and passwords by integrating identity, profile and
relationship information used across authentication systems used on the Net.
The initiative also includes the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law
School and Parity Communications, a company developing "social commerce"
software that has been operating in stealth mode.
The open-source project, managed by the Eclipse Foundation, is a response to Microsoft's InfoCard
identity management technology, Anthony Nadalin, distinguished engineer and
chief security architect at IBM, said in an interview.
"This is a move to help get identity management out in the open source.
InfoCard is one user centric identity system...but the implementation Microsoft
has is not what I would call open," he said. "There are a lot of hidden
elements." For example, he said, how it interacts with Active
Directory, Microsoft's identity management technology for businesses.
Microsoft has described InfoCard as a technology that gives users a single
place to manage authentication and payment information, in the same way a
wallet holds multiple credit cards. An InfoCard client on the PC will connect
with Web sites that need information for authentication or transactions.
Yet, Higgins is more than a rival for InfoCard, Nadalin said. "We are not
here to create another identity system, we are here to aggregate the existing
systems," he said. "We have invited Microsoft to participate...and we will
continue to work with Microsoft to integrate with InfoCard. We think that has to happen."
Higgins will complement InfoCard in providing client software for operating
systems other than Windows, Nadalin said. Also, it will make existing identity
management products, such as IBM's Tivoli software, work with InfoCard, he said.
IBM is expected to support Higgins in its products sometime next year.
"Microsoft would be left out in the cold without Higgins; it allows Microsoft
to participate in non-Windows environments," Nadalin said "Customers want
choice, they end up voting with their pocket book. They don't want to be locked in."
Higgins looks to be a step forward in solving the problem surrounding online
identities, said Kim Cameron, identity architect at Microsoft. "From what I've
seen, this is a very positive development," he said. "I think we are really
going to see the identity big bang--a whole wave of social and identity-aware
applications that are suddenly becoming possible."
But while Nadalin may have his mind set on where Higgins is headed, nothing
is set in stone, said Burton Group analyst Mike Neuenschwander. "It is open
source it is hard to tell exactly where it will head," he said.
There are other efforts to integrate identity information, but with IBM and
Novell Higgins has attracted big name support, Neuenschwander said.
"Everybody wants to be that central hub that integrates everybody else's
stuff," he said. "Higgins is significant in that IBM and Novell have stepped up
to say they are going to develop their client software under that project."
Neuenschwander doesn’t expect to see anything tangible come out of the
Higgins Project until at least the end of the year. "Then we can see with
greater certainty where they are headed," he said. "Microsoft has made it much further down the road with InfoCard."
Microsoft plans to deliver
InfoCard by the end of this year as part of Windows Vista, the next version
of its flagship operating system. InfoCard will also be available for Windows XP, Microsoft has said.