No subject
Fri Feb 8 18:42:25 UTC 2008
1) ordinary people just don't get the idea that their online identity
(their username) should be represented as a URL
2) ordinary people find the user experience of OpenID tends to be too
clunky at the moment ("I want to log into X but I'm being asked to give
my credentials to Y" kind of issue)
3) some techies (i.e. non-ordinary people :-) ) have perceived security
issues (particularly around phishing) leading to insufficient trust in
OpenID as an identity infrastructure
Note that by "from my perspective" I mean "this is what I'm sensing from
the community I deal with (UK education)". I have no hard evidence to
back these statements up unfortunately.
There is a fourth barrier as well:
4) not enough major RPs
which is probably the most significant, but that kinda falls out of the
other three I suspect?
Andy
--
Head of Development, Eduserv Foundation
http://www.eduserv.org.uk/foundation/
http://efoundations.typepad.com/
andy.powell at eduserv.org.uk
+44 (0)1225 474319=20
> -----Original Message-----
> From: general-bounces at openid.net=20
> [mailto:general-bounces at openid.net] On Behalf Of David Recordon
> Sent: 19 March 2008 00:32
> To: openid-general List
> Subject: [OpenID] Thinking About OpenID.com
>=20
> Earlier today I came across a blog post=20
> (http://www.jason-preston.com/index.php/2008/03/18/why-openid-
> will-never-work/
> ) talking about some of the adoption hurdles around OpenID=20
> for normal people. The largest concern still seems to come=20
> from how OpenID.net presents (or doesn't) itself in terms of=20
> being dead simple to actually get an OpenID. While I don't=20
> agree with every point that Jason makes, I certainly=20
> understand what he is saying especially with how he ended his=20
> response to my comment:
>=20
> > I think it's just that the concept of OpenID is supposed=20
> to be "braindead simple login for disparate web services,"
> > and when you go to the page, what you see is "confusing=20
> multiple login accounts, none of which you can do > anything=20
> with from this page."
>=20
> Thus the thought in my head is one that has come up in the=20
> past, though never anything we've done something about. What=20
> if we actually purchase OpenID.com (like Jason suggested) and=20
> use it to be a dead- simple normal person destination site? =20
> OpenID.net can remain more targeted for developers and we can=20
> stop fighting the battle of trying to make one site useful=20
> for everyone.
>=20
> Does this make sense to others? Would people see this as a=20
> useful way to spend OpenID Foundation resources?
>=20
> Thanks,
> --David
>=20
> _______________________________________________
> general mailing list
> general at openid.net
> http://openid.net/mailman/listinfo/general
>=20
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