- Page 2 and 3: Who here has usedOpenID?
- Page 4 and 5: What is OpenID?
- Page 6 and 7: What problemsdoes it solve?
- Page 8 and 9: “Someone else alreadygrabbed my u
- Page 10 and 11: What is an OpenID?
- Page 12 and 13: http://swillison.livejournal.com/
- Page 14 and 15: http://simonwillison.net/
- Page 16 and 17: What can you dowith an OpenID?
- Page 18 and 19: You can provethat claim
- Page 20 and 21: You can use it forauthentication
- Page 22 and 23: “I’m simonwillison.net”
- Page 24 and 25: (magic happens)
- Page 26 and 27: So it’s a bit likeMicrosoft Passp
- Page 28 and 29: And Microsoftdon’t get to own you
- Page 30 and 31: You, the user, decide.
- Page 34 and 35: Yes, but it can besomeone you trust
- Page 36: OK, how do I use it?
- Page 43 and 44: Not necessarily
- Page 45 and 46: You don’t knowtheir name
- Page 47 and 48: You don’t knowif they’re a pers
- Page 49 and 50: Where do I get thatinformation from
- Page 51: OpenID can even helpthem answer
- Page 57 and 58: Same as usual: challengethem with a
- Page 62 and 63: “I’m simonwillison.myopenid.com
- Page 64 and 65: Establishes shared secretwith ident
- Page 66 and 67: If you’re logged in there,you get
- Page 68 and 69: OpenID deliberatelydoesn’t specif
- Page 70 and 71: But providers canuse other methods
- Page 72 and 73: Out of bandauthentication via SMS,e
- Page 74 and 75: (one guy set that upusing DynDNS)
- Page 76 and 77: No authentication at all(just say
- Page 78 and 79: Yup. That’s the OpenIDversion of
- Page 80 and 81: Users can give awaytheir passwords
- Page 82 and 83:
Use your owndomain name
- Page 87 and 88:
Support for delegationis compulsory
- Page 89 and 90:
So everyone will end upwith one Ope
- Page 91 and 92:
(I have half a dozenOpenIDs already
- Page 93 and 94:
professionalsocialsecret...
- Page 95 and 96:
Three accounts is stillbetter than
- Page 97 and 98:
Yes. Different OpenIDs canexpress d
- Page 99 and 100:
An OpenID fromsun.com proves thatso
- Page 101 and 102:
My LiveJournal OpenIDtells you wher
- Page 103 and 104:
doxory.com uses thisfor contact imp
- Page 105 and 106:
It’s simple
- Page 107 and 108:
It’s a dumb network
- Page 109 and 110:
Isn’t putting all myeggs in one b
- Page 111 and 112:
“I forgot my password”means you
- Page 113 and 114:
What about phishing?
- Page 115 and 116:
I can has lolcats!? BETAMake your o
- Page 117 and 118:
Identity theft :(
- Page 119 and 120:
Sound familiar?
- Page 121 and 122:
You guys already needto solve that
- Page 124 and 125:
Better solutions
- Page 126 and 127:
Native browser supportfor OpenID (e
- Page 128 and 129:
Permanent cookie setusing out-of-ba
- Page 130 and 131:
“I forgot my password”becomes
- Page 132 and 133:
People can still signin if one of t
- Page 134 and 135:
You can take advantageof site-speci
- Page 136 and 137:
Portable contact lists
- Page 138 and 139:
I don’t need to tell youwhy that
- Page 140 and 141:
Pre-approved accounts
- Page 142 and 143:
OpenID andmicroformats
- Page 144 and 145:
“People keep asking me to jointhe
- Page 146 and 147:
Yes it does. But...
- Page 148 and 149:
If e-mail is secureenough for your
- Page 150 and 151:
What are the privacyimplications?
- Page 152 and 153:
Don’t publish a user’sOpenID wi
- Page 154 and 155:
The online equivalent of acredit re
- Page 156 and 157:
IANAL, but legalprotections against
- Page 158 and 159:
Patents?
- Page 160 and 161:
They won’t smack youdown with the
- Page 162 and 163:
Who else is involved?
- Page 164 and 165:
AOL - provider, fullconsumer by end
- Page 166 and 167:
(mainly as good PRfor CardSpace?)
- Page 168 and 169:
Six Apart
- Page 170 and 171:
JanRain
- Page 173 and 174:
Google?
- Page 175:
Thank you