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  3. The future of Passport

The future of Passport

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • P Paul Watson

    Chris Maunder wrote: I was just wondering how people feel about Passport as an authentication service Badly. All MS-stick-poking aside I don't think Passport itself will ever really become what MS wants it to become. There is just too much distrust of MS (rational or irational.) Also Passport was such a half hearted affair. I mean come on! The possibilities of this identity type service are just mind boggling. Yet what is Passport actually? You have one account, which in many cases you have to re-fill for different sites. How many people actually know about the Passport site? Not many I would warrant. It asks questions which are beneficial to Passport and it's affiliates but not very beneficial to you, the user. Anyway bottom line for me is that Passport was a half hearted affair and barely scraped the surface of what can be done. This kind of service can never be succesful if done half heartedly. Someone (and Liberty Alliance is as much a joke) needs to come in with a full blown vision of what this service can do. For starters multiple accounts per person is vital. e.g. You can be Chris Maunder to your bank, but John Doe III to the pron shop. I can go on and on about this concept as I have spent the last year researching it for a client. He reckons unequivocal trust is the number one key in a service like this.

    Paul Watson
    Bluegrass
    Cape Town, South Africa

    Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

    S Offline
    S Offline
    Stephane Rodriguez
    wrote on last edited by
    #20

    Paul Watson wrote: Badly. All MS-stick-poking aside I don't think Passport itself will ever really become what MS wants it to become. There is just too much distrust of MS (rational or irational.) Also Passport was such a half hearted affair. You wouldn't bet soon you'll be required an active passport to go through windows update, download the latest mandatory .NET run-time, and so on.


    How low can you go ?
    (MS rant)

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    • S Stephane Rodriguez

      Paul Watson wrote: Badly. All MS-stick-poking aside I don't think Passport itself will ever really become what MS wants it to become. There is just too much distrust of MS (rational or irational.) Also Passport was such a half hearted affair. You wouldn't bet soon you'll be required an active passport to go through windows update, download the latest mandatory .NET run-time, and so on.


      How low can you go ?
      (MS rant)

      P Offline
      P Offline
      Paul Watson
      wrote on last edited by
      #21

      .S.Rod. wrote: You wouldn't bet soon you'll be required an active passport to go through windows update, download the latest mandatory .NET run-time, and so on. *shrug* Even if they did that, what does it actually mean? Passport already has millions of accounts, but most of them are passive Hotmail accounts used by people who do not even realise they have a Passport. So adding Windows Update won't mean much. This whole concept has much profounder and interesting uses.

      Paul Watson
      Bluegrass
      Cape Town, South Africa

      Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

      S 1 Reply Last reply
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      • P Paul Watson

        .S.Rod. wrote: You wouldn't bet soon you'll be required an active passport to go through windows update, download the latest mandatory .NET run-time, and so on. *shrug* Even if they did that, what does it actually mean? Passport already has millions of accounts, but most of them are passive Hotmail accounts used by people who do not even realise they have a Passport. So adding Windows Update won't mean much. This whole concept has much profounder and interesting uses.

        Paul Watson
        Bluegrass
        Cape Town, South Africa

        Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

        S Offline
        S Offline
        Stephane Rodriguez
        wrote on last edited by
        #22

        Paul Watson wrote: This whole concept has much profounder and interesting uses. Exactly : - mandatory end-user subscription and fee. - $qualified$ customer profiling (remember doubleshit + abacus ?)


        How low can you go ?
        (MS rant)

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • D Daniel Ferguson

          Paul Watson wrote: He reckons unequivocal trust is the number one key in a service like this. Exactly, and the chances of that happening are .. let me get my calculator .. uh, none to less than none.

          I rolled my eyes so much that my vision is now 20/20 from the exercise. -John C. Dvorak

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          P Offline
          Paul Watson
          wrote on last edited by
          #23

          Daniel Ferguson wrote: Exactly, and the chances of that happening are .. let me get my calculator .. uh, none to less than none Well, we will see :)

          Paul Watson
          Bluegrass
          Cape Town, South Africa

          Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • C Chris Maunder

            I was just wondering how people feel about Passport as an authentication service. As far as I'm concerned it's a demographic harvesting service. The amount of information that is obtained from Passport for the various sign-ins between various websites is enormous. Well - it would be if it was pretty much only Microsoft that used it. To be fair I do love the idea. A single, automated sign-in method that stores all your preferences in one spot, and allows you to sign in to a site using the same familiar method using the one account and the one set of preferences. Great if you only actually want to use one account for different sites (which many people don't actually want to do) and great it you could actually store all your preferences for everything you'd ever need within your passport account (which often you can't). Even getting offers based on my behaviour is a Good Thing. I really don't want to hear about mortgages. Been there, done that. But gadgets and snowboards? Gimme! The thing that has got up my goat is that passport thinks I'm still in Australia. It's about to snow outside. I even took the laptop out on the balcony to prove to it I'm not in Oz anymore. So I dig around and find the preference page on passport and find that the only way I can update my preferences is if I tell it what province I'm in and what my postal code is. To me this says it in a nutshell. I don't want to tell it what province I'm in. I don't even know what postcode I'm in (I think it starts with M. Or K. Yeah - K sounds good). So we're in little standoff, Passport and I. I can enter my province and make up a useless postcode and give in, or I can not update my info and it can continue sending me Australian-only in the ad bar. Or I can uninstall MSN IM, move to trillian and use my now defunct Passport account for signing into Microsoft's sites. cheers, Chris Maunder

            realJSOPR Offline
            realJSOPR Offline
            realJSOP
            wrote on last edited by
            #24

            Microsoft is hoping that everyone will be required to have a Passport ID in order to do ANYTHING. Not only is Passport a bad idea, but the people that invented it and anyone that wants to control it simply cannot be trusted. ------- signature starts "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001 Please review the Legal Disclaimer in my bio. ------- signature ends

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            • C Chris Maunder

              I was just wondering how people feel about Passport as an authentication service. As far as I'm concerned it's a demographic harvesting service. The amount of information that is obtained from Passport for the various sign-ins between various websites is enormous. Well - it would be if it was pretty much only Microsoft that used it. To be fair I do love the idea. A single, automated sign-in method that stores all your preferences in one spot, and allows you to sign in to a site using the same familiar method using the one account and the one set of preferences. Great if you only actually want to use one account for different sites (which many people don't actually want to do) and great it you could actually store all your preferences for everything you'd ever need within your passport account (which often you can't). Even getting offers based on my behaviour is a Good Thing. I really don't want to hear about mortgages. Been there, done that. But gadgets and snowboards? Gimme! The thing that has got up my goat is that passport thinks I'm still in Australia. It's about to snow outside. I even took the laptop out on the balcony to prove to it I'm not in Oz anymore. So I dig around and find the preference page on passport and find that the only way I can update my preferences is if I tell it what province I'm in and what my postal code is. To me this says it in a nutshell. I don't want to tell it what province I'm in. I don't even know what postcode I'm in (I think it starts with M. Or K. Yeah - K sounds good). So we're in little standoff, Passport and I. I can enter my province and make up a useless postcode and give in, or I can not update my info and it can continue sending me Australian-only in the ad bar. Or I can uninstall MSN IM, move to trillian and use my now defunct Passport account for signing into Microsoft's sites. cheers, Chris Maunder

              N Offline
              N Offline
              Navin
              wrote on last edited by
              #25

              Microsoft Passport is utterly useless. I was driving from the US to Canada the other day, and offered my Passport account as authentication to the customs officer. He didn't accept it. Even a broken clock is right twice a day.

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              • S Sean Cull

                David Cunningham wrote: Just for consistency I always say I'm from Vancouver, BC, I'm born on January 1, 1955, etc. Funny you should mention Vancouver....That's where I'm from. Nice to see another Canadian on here :) -Sean

                A Offline
                A Offline
                Atlantys
                wrote on last edited by
                #26

                We do our best to bring out the best in CP. :-D

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                • D Daniel Ferguson

                  There are a several Canadians here. That and David C, Chris M, and the CP servers are here. So... all your CP are belong to us ... Muahhahahahaha!

                  I rolled my eyes so much that my vision is now 20/20 from the exercise. -John C. Dvorak

                  C Offline
                  C Offline
                  Chris Maunder
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #27

                  Funny you should mention me as a Canadian. Have a read of this. :) cheers, Chris Maunder

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                  • C Chris Maunder

                    Funny you should mention me as a Canadian. Have a read of this. :) cheers, Chris Maunder

                    D Offline
                    D Offline
                    Daniel Ferguson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #28

                    Chris Maunder wrote: Funny you should mention me as a Canadian. I meant that you're in Canada at the moment. Chris Maunder wrote: Have a read of this. :omg: Are you losing your Aussie accent? Do you add 'eh?' at the end of sentences? When you say 'about' does it sound like 'aboot'?

                    I rolled my eyes so much that my vision is now 20/20 from the exercise. -John C. Dvorak

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • C Chris Maunder

                      I was just wondering how people feel about Passport as an authentication service. As far as I'm concerned it's a demographic harvesting service. The amount of information that is obtained from Passport for the various sign-ins between various websites is enormous. Well - it would be if it was pretty much only Microsoft that used it. To be fair I do love the idea. A single, automated sign-in method that stores all your preferences in one spot, and allows you to sign in to a site using the same familiar method using the one account and the one set of preferences. Great if you only actually want to use one account for different sites (which many people don't actually want to do) and great it you could actually store all your preferences for everything you'd ever need within your passport account (which often you can't). Even getting offers based on my behaviour is a Good Thing. I really don't want to hear about mortgages. Been there, done that. But gadgets and snowboards? Gimme! The thing that has got up my goat is that passport thinks I'm still in Australia. It's about to snow outside. I even took the laptop out on the balcony to prove to it I'm not in Oz anymore. So I dig around and find the preference page on passport and find that the only way I can update my preferences is if I tell it what province I'm in and what my postal code is. To me this says it in a nutshell. I don't want to tell it what province I'm in. I don't even know what postcode I'm in (I think it starts with M. Or K. Yeah - K sounds good). So we're in little standoff, Passport and I. I can enter my province and make up a useless postcode and give in, or I can not update my info and it can continue sending me Australian-only in the ad bar. Or I can uninstall MSN IM, move to trillian and use my now defunct Passport account for signing into Microsoft's sites. cheers, Chris Maunder

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      Joe Woodbury
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #29

                      I would like Passport to work. As has been observed, no sites support it. I have a list of 25 logins sitting next to my computer and I found out two days ago that the list isn't complete (even after half-dozen tries I couldn't remember my username, though I eventually found that I had the password right.) As for the complaints that Passport collects too much information, all I can say is "Huh?" It collected nothing that an average person couldn't figure out with a phonebook and ten minutes on the net. Seriously, do people still think their personal information is secure? Larry Ellison is an idiot, but he did say something very right a few years ago, "There is no privacy, get over it." Maybe a little extreme, but this fanciful notion that there is this massive cadre of information known only to myself is utter nonsense. Moreover, who cares? If someone knows all this "personal" information about my life what are they going to do with it? (In fact, given that I don't currently own a house, maybe, just maybe, that news would get out to the mortgage spammers. Maybe they'd also realize I'm not female, and don't want my breasts enlarged, regardless of my sex, and am satisifed with the size of my penis, though I don't recall ever filling out a form anywhere indicating my feelings about either subject one way or another.)

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                      • D David Stone

                        :laugh: Yeah. But hey, I have to do something to get to Nish's level of posts. I mean come on, what do you expect me to do? Post things of actual substance? :rolleyes:


                        You will now find yourself in a wonderous, magical place, filled with talking gnomes, mythical squirrels, and, almost as an afterthought, your bookmarks -Shog9 teaching Mel Feik how to bookmark I don't know whether it's just the light but I swear the database server gives me dirty looks everytime I wander past. -Chris Maunder

                        B Offline
                        B Offline
                        Brian Delahunty
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #30

                        David Stone wrote: Post things of actual substance? ROTFLMAO!!! Good One! :laugh: ;-) Regards, Brian Dela :-)

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