identity

The unveiling of iPhone OS 4.0 caused a bit of a stir last week.  Apple will finally allow multi-tasking on iPhone devices, which means that true communications clients can finally be built to run on iPhone.  No longer will users be required to load and run the Skype, Truphone or Google voice clients – they will simply run in the background. 

In a lengthy piece written April 8, Stuart Henshall outlines the implications for this development, the biggest of which is the disintermediation of the traditional telecoms industry.  Stuart posits that, with the huge numbers of mobile clients in the market – and especially iPhone – telephone numbers will finally go the way of the Dodo, and identity will migrate to the owners of cloud assets – the Yahoo’s, Skype’s, and likely (although Stuart doesn’t say this) Facebook’s of the world.  “Caller ID” will become the information presented by the identity network, and not just a phone number and name.  And so, after resisting for decades, the telecom companies finally really do become dumb pipes running a stupid network with smart end points.

The upcoming eComm event in San Francisco seems to be pointing in that direction too. With its heavy emphasis on policy, networks and end-point technologies, a whole day devoted to Augmented Reality, and presentations from just two carriers (not including the Verizon cameo in Day 2’s panel on the US National Broadband Panel), the momentum in the industry seems clear, and the carriers have apparently absented themselves from the discussion.

Would that it were as easy as everyone implies.  If we’re not careful, however, we’re headed for the same IM Gulag that exists today, now spread across mobile devices.  Communications networks will splinter into a myriad of smaller islands, and by default, the phone number will remain our pre-eminent identity, simply because nothing else is universal. 

Last week I reconnected with a friend I hadn’t chatted with since dumping all other IM networks for Skype in November 2008.  She doesn’t use Skype, and we don’t call each other that often.  I reinstalled MSN messenger, and soon we were talking. It was a stark illustration.  Our identities, and consequently communications applications which require identity, were walled off from each other by entrenched corporate interests.  It was as if I were a Verizon customer, and she an AT&T customer,  and neither network had agreed to interoperate with the other.

Do we really want that kind of identity network?

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Operators want to unlock subscriber data

by alec on January 22, 2008

Unsurprisingly,  a survey by UK based Apertio suggests that operators are looking to gain value from their subscriber data

The survey found CSPs feel that to effectively compete with newcomers, as well as traditional competitors, they need to unlock the vast amount of subscriber data they hold and utilise it in real-time to create an integrated service and marketing model. The respondents recognised the value created by an informed view of the customer, with 76% stating that customer profiling is one of the most relevant areas where they can use the data, closely followed by identity management (64%). Such information puts the service providers in a privileged position, by being able to provide the user with services that are more useful and relevant to them, rather than the standard one-size-fits-all offering.

In addition, Dr. Ray Barghi, Sr. Group Manager for Subscriber Data management at Sprint goes on to say:

“By unifying subscriber data in a single repository, application complexity and integration issues are eliminated. CSPs can then take advantage of the expanded ecosystem of application and service developers open to them. Such moves will provide the catalyst for the creation and delivery of a new generation of innovative, relevant and personalised services.”

Such a repository will have to be:

  1. opt-in, so that users can add the valuable information that they wish to add.  Think of how Facebook handles user profiles today.
  2. a shared standard, so that developers don't have to target the market on a carrier by carrier basis with customized versions of the application.

Otherwise, it's simply a non-starter. 

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Pownce poseur snatches Chris Pirillo’s good name

July 28, 2007

Chris Pirillo has a beef with social networks.  It's called identity. A poseur on Pownce has snatched his identity, and started to sign up unwitting powncers as his friends.  People he doesn't know.  People who don't know him. Virtually all social networks suffer from the same problem.  As networks proliferate, individuals can't be members of all networks, [...]

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Extending OpenID to SIP

January 25, 2007

My friend Aswath Rao continues to push forward the idea of using OpenID to assert identity in voice networks.  Many others, including myself, believe that the ability to assert identity is an important step in the evolution of communications networks.  If you have an interest in this, check out what Aswath has written. UPDATE: Minutes after [...]

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Bloviating? Why I oughta!!!!

January 1, 2007

I’m very happy to hear that Ted agrees with me on personal identity management.  I do disagree, somewhat, with his view that identity must be wrapped in a centralized trust model.  It seems to me that there are a myriad of ways which you could assert identity based on relationships we already have: banks, churches, [...]

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"New Presence" and identity

December 26, 2006

Phil Windley says that we’re going to need better identity structures before the New Presence can emerge.  He asks whether there is a business need which is strong enough to drive presence all by itself.  Ken Camp’s lengthy post The Present Known as Presence can be distilled down to the same question: is presence enough?   [...]

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Ken's Magnificent Seven

December 6, 2006

Ken Camp has posted a round-up of his favorite categories and companies in the Unified Communications space over 2006.  Many thanks for the iotum mention Ken! Of challenges for 2007, he writes: For the future, the big issue I see is how our personal information about presence, relevance and context must become part of our digital [...]

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It's All About Identity

June 28, 2006

I have the distinct impression that Rich Tehrani had the same briefing from Communigate that I did.  He certainly seems to be as excited.  He has been talking up the idea of a unified SIP address (what Communigate calls SIPifying the world) in order to deal with the proliferation of addresses we all have. On a [...]

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iotum and Identity

February 25, 2006

David Kearns, writing in Network World, has offered an identity based view of what we do at iotum.  Much of what we talked about as we were developing the early designs was the "Who, What, Where, When, Why" of communications.  We boiled that down to the overarching concept of relevance, and ultimately identity becamse one [...]

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Carly Fiorina Keynote at ITExpo

September 26, 2005

Rich Tehrani has a great post over on his blog about his conversation with Carly Fiorina and her upcoming keynote at ITExpo.  Sounds like it’s going to be a great speech!  One of the items they discussed was the separation between carrier and enterprise, quoted below: In her words, telecom/datacom and service provider/enterprise are not separate realms. [...]

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