The document discusses Personal Data Stores (PDS), which allow individuals to store their personal data in a private cloud and control who can access it. PDS aims to give users portability of their data across services and provide a foundation for person-to-person and person-to-business relationships online. It describes how PDS uses the Personal Data Exchange (PDX) standard to enable interoperability and portability of personal data.
This talk was presented at the 2016 Cloud Identity Summit. It was in the Rise of the Identity-enabled Personal Information Economy Track. It puts forward 6 Diagrams to make Sense of the overall Personal Data Ecosystem including What is Personal Data? What Happens to Personal Data? What are Market Models and how is it regulated?
This presentation was presented as the pre-opening talk at Identity North 2016 in Toronto. It covers the big question - What is Identity? Key Concepts and Terms. Contextualizing Identity for Enterprise, Government and in the Commons.
Noggin - World's first marketplace for Personal DataNoggin Asia
Direct marketing is expensive; and customer details are usually unknown. Customer on other hand is worried about personal data. Noggin is a marketplace to connect these two. Discover us at www.nogginasia.com. Consumers can earn by sharing personal data
Innovation in the Digital Identity space is crucial for progress. Here’s a fact: a new identity is generated with every birth. Now consider this: by the time you finish your day today, a staggering 360,000 children will be eligible for an identity document.
Feb 2020 - Senate Submission Financial Technology and Regulatory TechnologyTimothy Holborn
submission to: https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Senate/Financial_Technology_and_Regulatory_Technology/FinancialRegulatoryTech/Submissions
This talk was presented at the 2016 Cloud Identity Summit. It was in the Rise of the Identity-enabled Personal Information Economy Track. It puts forward 6 Diagrams to make Sense of the overall Personal Data Ecosystem including What is Personal Data? What Happens to Personal Data? What are Market Models and how is it regulated?
This presentation was presented as the pre-opening talk at Identity North 2016 in Toronto. It covers the big question - What is Identity? Key Concepts and Terms. Contextualizing Identity for Enterprise, Government and in the Commons.
Noggin - World's first marketplace for Personal DataNoggin Asia
Direct marketing is expensive; and customer details are usually unknown. Customer on other hand is worried about personal data. Noggin is a marketplace to connect these two. Discover us at www.nogginasia.com. Consumers can earn by sharing personal data
Innovation in the Digital Identity space is crucial for progress. Here’s a fact: a new identity is generated with every birth. Now consider this: by the time you finish your day today, a staggering 360,000 children will be eligible for an identity document.
Feb 2020 - Senate Submission Financial Technology and Regulatory TechnologyTimothy Holborn
submission to: https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Senate/Financial_Technology_and_Regulatory_Technology/FinancialRegulatoryTech/Submissions
Digital Identity by Roxana Nasoi Transylvania Crypto Conference #TCConf Roxana Nasoi
Digital Identity, the problem of privacy and anonymity in today's world. How banking systems and e-cash systems like Paypal exploit your data, how your actions influence the ones next to us, and why Bitcoin might be the right solution towards data ownership.
Presented at Transylvania Crypto Conference, Cluj Napoca, 10-13th of October, 2019.
Presented by Michael Kaiser as the ethics segment of the National Business Institute's Continuing Legal Education (CLE) seminar "Strategies for Legal Research on the Web."
The CLE was held December 20, 2011, at the Westin Hotel in Seattle, Washington.
Mr. Kaiser, founder of the Kaiser Legal Group, is a consultant and mediator. He also regularly speaks at the law school level and at Continuing Legal Education (CLE) seminars for attorneys. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from the University of Washington and his Juris Doctor from Seattle University. You may contact Mr. Kaiser at 206-660-2858 or Michael.Kaiser@Kaiser-LegalGroup.org.
Presentation by George Roberts on 'Who and how am I online? Personal identity management for professional development – from the end-user’s perspective' at the LLLWFD ID Management assembly, Birmingham, May 2011
Future of value of data asia iot-asia presentation - 22 march 2018Future Agenda
Ahead of a series of major foresight events across Asia, we are very pleased to be sharing some initial views this week in Singapore on the key topic of the future value of data.
The value of data is an issue of interest to many. In a world where multiple systems are being transformed by digital, there are a host of organisations rushing to capitalise on the opportunity. They are not only digitising their businesses and creating new digital business models and platforms, but within this many are also seeing that their future value lies in data on which such models depend. This is common to a wide range of sectors and is evidently fuelling a 'data land grab' by many. There is however an important underlying question that has not yet been clearly addressed. This is what we actually mean by the 'value' of data. Recent events suggest that data sets can be both the most precious economic asset on earth as well as a liability that is used against our most precious institutions. The question of where the value in data lies then, is pivotal to how we understand the future of data ownership, access, regulation and use.
The data debate is becoming extreme. Many protagonists adopt 'all or nothing' positions around issues such as privacy, encryption, security and economic freedom. Data can clearly fulfil different roles in the economy, in society and for organisations and individuals. However, some simplistic views help us understand some roles - but also mislead and blind us.
Oil: The perspective that data is the new oil is one example in common debate: Vast hordes of it can make its owners very wealthy and powerful but it is however not a finite, exhaustible resource, nor are the costs of extraction high. So maybe it is not really like oil?
Currency: Equally some suggest that data is the new currency. Data can certainly serve as a medium for exchange and can also be used as a store of value… but describing data as currency really doesn't tell us much. It just confirms that data has value in certain contexts.
Water: Others we have talked to take a more holistic view and suggest data to be more like water - abundant and essential. It enables many other things of greater economic value to grow and develop. But in many contexts, it itself is maybe seen to have little or no value.
All three analogies have merit, but none seem to be quite right? There is no clear shared view on what data actually is - this may hold us back. As we move ahead, many now recognise that we need a better, more informed, forward looking, global, cross-industry view. If companies, governments and individuals are going to make the most of all the new data increasingly available, then several now consider that we need a more coherent picture of its real value. Too many strategic assumptions are being made without a shared, informed common perspective.
This is a presentation I gave to the South Carolina Law Review Symposium entitled: On Task?: Expanding the Boundaries of Legal Education, February 28, 2014.
Unbundled legal services, also called limited scope representation or discrete task representation, may be used by a variety of law practices from solos to large law firms to serve an large market of unmet legal needs. Technology exists to assist the attorney in streamlining the unbundling process by using document automation and assembly programs that make unbundling legal services a cost-effective form of delivering legal services to the public. However, attorneys providing limited scope representation should be aware of certain ethics risks and best practices. Whether unbundling is handled in a traditional firm setting or through the use of technology, attorneys should be aware of the benefits and risks of this complementary method of delivering legal services to their clients.
This was a two-part CLE for the North Carolina Bar Association about how to set up and operate a virtual law practice. It covers both the tech and ethics issues as well as the practical how-tos.
To find a lawyer becomes a headache for business organization or general people. Sometimes people face many difficulties to find proper lawyer as their requirements, because of information gap. In addition, it is also difficult to find experienced lawyer. Usually, in order to hire a lawyer people need to meet him physically which is time-consuming and expensive. The delivery of legal services remains largely fragmented, outdated, and inefficient.The main purpose of this paper is to do empirical research about how the Internet is currently failing laypeople who are searching online for the legal help to their life problems and what a future agenda of user-centered standards and practices for better legal help on the Internet could be. It initially looks at the existing literature about how the Internet can best be used as legal asset and the situation quo of lawful help websites. Then it metering and looks at negative client reports and Investigates of legal help websites. Finally, it presents the primary study of how people search for resources to solve a legal problem, how they scorn and counts legal aid services online, and their recompose on which existing lawful help websites they consider to be the most usable, the most faithful, and the most valued. This data is necessary to propose new best exercises about how these tech-based services can best serve people, in terms of usability, characteristic of service, and safeguard of the users' interests. It also ensures the importance of the Internet as a lawful help service and highlights the need for more experiment and development on better online legal service help websites that fit general people needs and preferences
ONLINE LEGAL SERVICE: THE PRESENT AND FUTUREijcsit
To find a lawyer becomes a headache for business organization or general people. Sometimes people face many difficulties to find proper lawyer as their requirements, because of information gap. In addition, it is also difficult to find experienced lawyer. Usually, in order to hire a lawyer people need to meet him physically which is time-consuming and expensive. The delivery of legal services remains largely fragmented, outdated, and inefficient.The main purpose of this paper is to do empirical research about how the Internet is currently failing laypeople who are searching online for the legal help to their life problems and what a future agenda of user-centered standards and practices for better legal help on the Internet could be. It initially looks at the existing literature about how the Internet can best be used as legal asset and the situation quo of lawful help websites. Then it metering and looks at negative client reports and Investigates of legal help websites. Finally, it presents the primary study of how people search for resources to solve a legal problem, how they scorn and counts legal aid services online, and their recompose on which existing lawful help websites they consider to be the most usable, the most faithful, and the most valued. This data is necessary to propose new best exercises about how these tech-based services can best serve people, in terms of usability, characteristic of service, and safeguard of the users' interests. It also ensures the importance of the Internet as a lawful help service and highlights the need for more experiment and development on better online legal service help websites that fit general people needs and preferences.
These are the slides from my presentation to the ABA Commission on the Future of Legal Services. I covered the basics of virtual law practice but also gamification, games, and online engagement for legal services. The video for this presentation is here: http://bcove.me/4tmkn2x1
Future agenda the future of digital business - dubai - 29 april 2018Future Agenda
This is a talk for the Dubai Future Accelerator exploring key emerging shifts for business, especially with a digital focus. In links together insights from our global discussions on the future of the company, the future of data, the future of privacy as well as recent projects on the future value of data and the future of trust. More information on all of these are available on the main Future Agenda website www.futureagenda.org
Digital Identity by Roxana Nasoi Transylvania Crypto Conference #TCConf Roxana Nasoi
Digital Identity, the problem of privacy and anonymity in today's world. How banking systems and e-cash systems like Paypal exploit your data, how your actions influence the ones next to us, and why Bitcoin might be the right solution towards data ownership.
Presented at Transylvania Crypto Conference, Cluj Napoca, 10-13th of October, 2019.
Presented by Michael Kaiser as the ethics segment of the National Business Institute's Continuing Legal Education (CLE) seminar "Strategies for Legal Research on the Web."
The CLE was held December 20, 2011, at the Westin Hotel in Seattle, Washington.
Mr. Kaiser, founder of the Kaiser Legal Group, is a consultant and mediator. He also regularly speaks at the law school level and at Continuing Legal Education (CLE) seminars for attorneys. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from the University of Washington and his Juris Doctor from Seattle University. You may contact Mr. Kaiser at 206-660-2858 or Michael.Kaiser@Kaiser-LegalGroup.org.
Presentation by George Roberts on 'Who and how am I online? Personal identity management for professional development – from the end-user’s perspective' at the LLLWFD ID Management assembly, Birmingham, May 2011
Future of value of data asia iot-asia presentation - 22 march 2018Future Agenda
Ahead of a series of major foresight events across Asia, we are very pleased to be sharing some initial views this week in Singapore on the key topic of the future value of data.
The value of data is an issue of interest to many. In a world where multiple systems are being transformed by digital, there are a host of organisations rushing to capitalise on the opportunity. They are not only digitising their businesses and creating new digital business models and platforms, but within this many are also seeing that their future value lies in data on which such models depend. This is common to a wide range of sectors and is evidently fuelling a 'data land grab' by many. There is however an important underlying question that has not yet been clearly addressed. This is what we actually mean by the 'value' of data. Recent events suggest that data sets can be both the most precious economic asset on earth as well as a liability that is used against our most precious institutions. The question of where the value in data lies then, is pivotal to how we understand the future of data ownership, access, regulation and use.
The data debate is becoming extreme. Many protagonists adopt 'all or nothing' positions around issues such as privacy, encryption, security and economic freedom. Data can clearly fulfil different roles in the economy, in society and for organisations and individuals. However, some simplistic views help us understand some roles - but also mislead and blind us.
Oil: The perspective that data is the new oil is one example in common debate: Vast hordes of it can make its owners very wealthy and powerful but it is however not a finite, exhaustible resource, nor are the costs of extraction high. So maybe it is not really like oil?
Currency: Equally some suggest that data is the new currency. Data can certainly serve as a medium for exchange and can also be used as a store of value… but describing data as currency really doesn't tell us much. It just confirms that data has value in certain contexts.
Water: Others we have talked to take a more holistic view and suggest data to be more like water - abundant and essential. It enables many other things of greater economic value to grow and develop. But in many contexts, it itself is maybe seen to have little or no value.
All three analogies have merit, but none seem to be quite right? There is no clear shared view on what data actually is - this may hold us back. As we move ahead, many now recognise that we need a better, more informed, forward looking, global, cross-industry view. If companies, governments and individuals are going to make the most of all the new data increasingly available, then several now consider that we need a more coherent picture of its real value. Too many strategic assumptions are being made without a shared, informed common perspective.
This is a presentation I gave to the South Carolina Law Review Symposium entitled: On Task?: Expanding the Boundaries of Legal Education, February 28, 2014.
Unbundled legal services, also called limited scope representation or discrete task representation, may be used by a variety of law practices from solos to large law firms to serve an large market of unmet legal needs. Technology exists to assist the attorney in streamlining the unbundling process by using document automation and assembly programs that make unbundling legal services a cost-effective form of delivering legal services to the public. However, attorneys providing limited scope representation should be aware of certain ethics risks and best practices. Whether unbundling is handled in a traditional firm setting or through the use of technology, attorneys should be aware of the benefits and risks of this complementary method of delivering legal services to their clients.
This was a two-part CLE for the North Carolina Bar Association about how to set up and operate a virtual law practice. It covers both the tech and ethics issues as well as the practical how-tos.
To find a lawyer becomes a headache for business organization or general people. Sometimes people face many difficulties to find proper lawyer as their requirements, because of information gap. In addition, it is also difficult to find experienced lawyer. Usually, in order to hire a lawyer people need to meet him physically which is time-consuming and expensive. The delivery of legal services remains largely fragmented, outdated, and inefficient.The main purpose of this paper is to do empirical research about how the Internet is currently failing laypeople who are searching online for the legal help to their life problems and what a future agenda of user-centered standards and practices for better legal help on the Internet could be. It initially looks at the existing literature about how the Internet can best be used as legal asset and the situation quo of lawful help websites. Then it metering and looks at negative client reports and Investigates of legal help websites. Finally, it presents the primary study of how people search for resources to solve a legal problem, how they scorn and counts legal aid services online, and their recompose on which existing lawful help websites they consider to be the most usable, the most faithful, and the most valued. This data is necessary to propose new best exercises about how these tech-based services can best serve people, in terms of usability, characteristic of service, and safeguard of the users' interests. It also ensures the importance of the Internet as a lawful help service and highlights the need for more experiment and development on better online legal service help websites that fit general people needs and preferences
ONLINE LEGAL SERVICE: THE PRESENT AND FUTUREijcsit
To find a lawyer becomes a headache for business organization or general people. Sometimes people face many difficulties to find proper lawyer as their requirements, because of information gap. In addition, it is also difficult to find experienced lawyer. Usually, in order to hire a lawyer people need to meet him physically which is time-consuming and expensive. The delivery of legal services remains largely fragmented, outdated, and inefficient.The main purpose of this paper is to do empirical research about how the Internet is currently failing laypeople who are searching online for the legal help to their life problems and what a future agenda of user-centered standards and practices for better legal help on the Internet could be. It initially looks at the existing literature about how the Internet can best be used as legal asset and the situation quo of lawful help websites. Then it metering and looks at negative client reports and Investigates of legal help websites. Finally, it presents the primary study of how people search for resources to solve a legal problem, how they scorn and counts legal aid services online, and their recompose on which existing lawful help websites they consider to be the most usable, the most faithful, and the most valued. This data is necessary to propose new best exercises about how these tech-based services can best serve people, in terms of usability, characteristic of service, and safeguard of the users' interests. It also ensures the importance of the Internet as a lawful help service and highlights the need for more experiment and development on better online legal service help websites that fit general people needs and preferences.
These are the slides from my presentation to the ABA Commission on the Future of Legal Services. I covered the basics of virtual law practice but also gamification, games, and online engagement for legal services. The video for this presentation is here: http://bcove.me/4tmkn2x1
Future agenda the future of digital business - dubai - 29 april 2018Future Agenda
This is a talk for the Dubai Future Accelerator exploring key emerging shifts for business, especially with a digital focus. In links together insights from our global discussions on the future of the company, the future of data, the future of privacy as well as recent projects on the future value of data and the future of trust. More information on all of these are available on the main Future Agenda website www.futureagenda.org
Mydex Annual ICO Roundtable - Personal data & Data Protection Act by William ...Mydex CIC
On 8th of April, William Heath, Mydex Chairman gave a presentation at the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) Annual Roundtable 2013 about big data, personal data stores and Mydex’ position on the Data Protection Act (DPA). Here is the presentation along with the audio attached to each slide. Feel free to watch and hear William’s presentation at your own leisure.
To read William's reflections from the day, go to http://mydex.org/prnews/news-mydex-chairman-speaks-at-the-information-commissioners-office-ico-annual-roundtable-2013/
For more information about Mydex, kindly visit http://mydex.org/about/
Or visit the developers site at http://dev.mydex.org
And to become a member of Mydex Personal Data Store, visit http://pds.mydex.org
Also learn more about Mydex-Midata at http://midata.mydex.org
and Mydex-Third Sector at http://thirdsector.mydex.org
Follow Mydex on: -
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mydexcic
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Mydex.org
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mydexcic/
RSS feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/Mydex
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/u/1/104992390676431315997/posts
EDF2014: Michele Vescovi, Researcher, Semantic & Knowledge Innovation Lab, It...European Data Forum
Selected Talk by Michele Vescovi, Researcher, Semantic & Knowledge Innovation Lab, Italy at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Toward Personal Big Data passing through user Transparency, Control and Awareness: a Living-Lab Experience
I presented this talk on September 23 to the Computer Science and Telecommunications Board of the National Academies in Washington DC. It has three parts
1) What is User Centric Digital Identity
2) What are the technologies that have been developed to date
3) Emerging work on developing a Personal Data Ecosystem.
The Case for Personal Information Empowerment and the rise of personal data s...Mydex CIC
For more information about Mydex, kindly visit http://mydex.org/about/
Or visit the developers site at http://dev.mydex.org
And to become a member of Mydex Personal Data Store, visit http://pds.mydex.org
Also learn more about Mydex-Midata at http://midata.mydex.org
and Mydex-Third Sector at http://thirdsector.mydex.org
Follow Mydex on: -
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mydexcic
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Mydex.org
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mydexcic/
RSS feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/Mydex
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/u/1/104992390676431315997/posts
Introduction to Mydex CIC Personal Data Stores - 7th March 2013Mydex CIC
Video of this presentation is available here http://ow.ly/jf3Bz
Mydex Community Interest Company (CIC) is building the personal data services platform for the semantic web and transforming the opportunity for individuals to manage and control their lives.
Transcription coming up soon!
For more information about Mydex, kindly visit http://mydex.org/about/
Or visit the developers site at http://dev.mydex.org
And to become a member of Mydex Personal Data Store, visit http://pds.mydex.org
Also learn more about Mydex-Midata at http://midata.mydex.org
and Mydex-Third Sector at http://thirdsector.mydex.org
Follow Mydex on: -
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/mydexcic
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Mydex.org
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/mydexcic/
RSS feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/Mydex
Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/u/1/104992390676431315997/posts
E-co-innovation and Living Labs for educational e-servicesNoël Conruyt
This presentation about e-co-innovation for making e-services was made at the IEEE DEST conference on the 25th of July 2013 in Palo Alto, Silicon Valley: http://www.dest2013.digital-ecology.org
The video of the presentation is here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCn15ELCm8w
It presents the concept of Living Lab and the instance that we developped in Reunion Island in the domain of education with ICT. The example of instrumental e-learning in music teaching and learning is given to explain our methodology and use of a creativity platform. In this presentation and associated paper, we stress the importance on dealing with know-how rather than knowledge with another method called Sign management for annotating scores with videos. Lastly, we introduce the Semiotic Web as a new paradigm for making education e-services.
Artur Serra, Deputy director i2CAT, presenting The city as a living lab: Barcelona's initiative during the ENoLL fringe session "Open Innovation and Living Labs shaping the cities and regions of the future" at the EC Innovation Convention 2014.
EDF2014: Talk of Abraham Bernstein, Full Professor of Informatics, University...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Abraham Bernstein, Full Professor of Informatics, University of Zurich, Switzerland at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: ViSTA-TV - Online TV Statistics and Dynamic Joint Recommendations
Live migration in Mobile Edge Computing (MEC)Andy Jones
In cellular networks, M stands for Mobile. Mobility in MEC demands that applications survive handover between MEC server nodes deployed at the network edge. The sweet-spot for MEC server deployments is at aggregation sites serving clusters of cells. To reduce latency and bandwidth overheads to perform a realtime live migration at MEC Server-to-MEC Server handover requires a deconstruction of the application into an idle/stateless portion and a (number of) per-session stateful portion(s) and involves a multi-step pre-emptive approach to transferring the application data to the new serving MEC Server. The pre-emptive instantiation of the application in "likely handover targets" (i.e. neighbouring MEC Servers) could leverage SON techniques such as automatic neighbour relations. Furthermore, container frameworks will further reduce these overheads compared with approaches based on VM migration.
DeFinality - Crafting Institutional gateways to Decentralized Finance marketsFloyd DCosta
Blockchain Worx has developed an institutional DeFi framework and is collaborating with partners to craft enterprise gateway into decentralized finance markets. Securely aggregating DeFi protocols, along with integration into enterprise systems, enables compliant institutional participation in DeFi.
DEcentralised Citizens Owned (DECODE): Data sovereignty for citizensFrancesca Bria
Presentation of the DECODE project (www.decodeproject.eu) by Francesca Bria, DECODE Project Coordinator. DECODE provides tools that put individuals in control of whether they keep their personal data private or share it for the public good.
This is the keynote presentation that I gave at MyData 2018. It explains the connection between identity and personal data. Some of my story of how I began working on identity 15 years ago. The Domains of Identity, My master's report is explained and then core components of Self-Sovereign Identity is explained. I conclude sharing some thoughts on how we work together to build alignment.
Traditional financial systems are limited in many ways, and blockchain can help them move to the next stage. Decentralized Finance is one of the hot topics at the moment. This technology is capable of introducing new possibilities of a trustless global financial system with a much quicker and more secured settlement time.
Decentralized finance applications can’t be tampered with, promotes interoperable design, fully transparent network, permissionless access, and user empowerment. There are already a vast number of DeFi apps for multiple varying use cases.
Popular DeFi use cases include asset management, complying with AML and CFT measurements, decentralized organizations, analytics and risk management, and so on.
We at 101 Blockchains believe decentralized Finance is the next stage for our financial systems. That’s why we offer premium blockchain courses specifically for DeFi and anyone who wants to utilize this technology for their company.
Our Introduction to DeFi course will focus on the purpose and scope of DeFi, along with introducing you to the underlying mechanism.
Learn more about the course from here ->
https://academy.101blockchains.com/courses/defi-course
We also offer additional courses and masterclasses for the finance sector. Learn more about the course from here ->
Blockchain in Finance Masterclass
https://academy.101blockchains.com/courses/blockchain-in-finance
Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) Masterclass
https://academy.101blockchains.com/courses/central-bank-digital-currency
Enterprise Blockchains and Trade Finance Course
https://academy.101blockchains.com/courses/enterprise-blockchains-and-trade-finance
We also offer lucrative certification courses for professionals. Learn more about these courses from here ->
Certified Enterprise Blockchain Professional (CEBP) course https://academy.101blockchains.com/courses/blockchain-expert-certification
Certified Enterprise Blockchain Architect (CEBA) course
https://academy.101blockchains.com/courses/certified-enterprise-blockchain-architect
Certified Blockchain Security Architect (CBSE) course
https://academy.101blockchains.com/courses/certified-blockchain-security-expert
This is a talk I was asked to give at the What is Universe? at the University of Oregon, (on their Portland Campus). I cover this history of the Internet Identity Workshop and talk about its core nature as a torus / bowl a feminine form and how this has resulted in the innovation of Self-Sovereign Identity
Simplifying Data Governance and Security with a Logical Data Fabric (ASEAN)Denodo
Watch full webinar here: https://bit.ly/38UlhbN
In an increasingly distributed and complex data landscape, it is becoming increasingly difficult to govern and secure data effectively throughout the enterprise. Whether it be securing data across different repositories or monitoring access across different business units, the proliferation of data technologies and repositories across both on-premises and in the cloud is making the task unattainable. The challenge is only made greater by the ongoing pressure to offer self-service data access to business users.
Data Virtualization allows the creation of a logical data fabric layer that not only increases the agility of data provisioning but offers a simple, fast and cost-effective way to secure and governance all your data.
Tune in and learn:
- How to use a logical data fabric to build an enterprise-wide data access role model
- Centralize security when data is spread across multiple systems residing both on-premises and in the cloud
- Control and audit data access across different regions
Decentralized Finance is a game-changer for the financial industry, allowing anyone with an internet connection to access financial services without the need for intermediaries. DeFi Protocols offer a complete overview of this new ecosystem, providing users with a secure and transparent way to invest, trade, and earn returns on their crypto assets. From lending and borrowing platforms to decentralized exchanges and stablecoins, DeFi has something for everyone. Exciting times ahead for finance! To Read complete overview of DeFi protocols Visit- https://www.prolitus.com/blog/defi-protocols-a-complete-overview/
How Personal Cloud Networks Enable New Business Modelsdrummondreed
These are the slides from the first webinar in the Respect Network Personal Cloud Webinar Series. They provide an introduction to personal clouds and personal cloud networks and explain why they will enable new business models based on higher trust in digital relationships.
In 2003, the DoD CIO published the "Net-Centric Data Strategy". This briefing was a collection of the many slides that we used between 2003-2006 to articulate the concepts of the strategy and the value of information sharing. It addresses the essentials of Net-Centricity, the goals and approaches of the Data Strategy, Communities of Interest, Common Operational Picture COP) vs. User-Defined Operational Picture (UDOP).
This is a presentation from the MyData Online 2020 Conference that covers the history and evolution of digital identity from the first computers in World War 2 to Enterprise Identity and Access Management and emerging new Self-Sovereign Identity Technology.
Thinking ahead GDPR and CCPA are coming and people are freaking out about how their data is being used. What are the new tools for a Personal Data Ecosystem.
The Domains of Identity presentation covers the 16 domains of Identity outlined in Kaliya's Masters Report written for the Master of Science in Identity Management and Security program. It is available https://www.identitywoman.net/domains-of-identity
This is a deck that highlights the origins of my Identity Ecosystem Mapping efforts. It shares snapshots of the prototype map in Kumu and outlines the functionality possible for Version 2.0 using the Knowledge Ecology Interface system developed by SOSACorp.
This is a deck that for describing Self-Sovereign Identity. It was presented at InDITA. It covers Distributed Ledgers (Blockchains), Verifiable Claims, Decentralized Identifiers.
This talk articulates 1) what is a blockchain 2) why it is interesting 3) talks through use-cases grounded in real world projects. 4) Highlights questions government leaders should ask before deciding to use a blockchain.
Self-Sovereign Identity technology has enormous potential to empower individuals and address privacy challenges globally. It uses shared ledgers (blockchain) to give individuals the power to create and manage their own identifiers, collect verified claims and interact with others on the network on their terms. This lighting talk by one of the pioneers working on this new emerging layer of the internet for 15 years will give a high level picture of how it works covering the core standards and technologies along with outlining some potential use-cases.
Identity can seem deceptively simple. We know who we are. Sometimes we have to convince others of that fact and confirm other characteristics: our age, our qualifications, or our right to access some services or tools. This happens every day over the Internet, but in ways that are disorganized, redundant, and risky. The lack of reliable, universal standards puts our private information at risk of public dissemination, fraud or worse.
The pioneers developing the internet didn’t define nuanced standards for identity -- most everything was just username and passwords. Over the past 20 years we have seen a range of standards that solve some identity challenges, including SAML, LDAP, OpenID Connect, OAuth, SCIM, Information Cards, and FIDO. None of them have comprehensively addressed the challenge of identity at internet scale.
A new set of standards is emerging that creates an infrastructure for self-sovereign identity that can scale. This talk looks forward to help you think ahead and prepare for this new infrastructure. We will walk through standards that together create a new identity infrastructure that leverages the blockchain. This isn’t about what you can implement tomorrow to solve your employee identity challenges or manage customer accounts. It will instead prepare you for the coming changes and help you play a role in shaping them.
This is the presentation I gave at the Grace Hopper Celebration for Women in Computing October 2015. It covers three main ethical market models that could support the emergence of a Personal Data Ecosystem centered on individuals and their personal clouds. The three models are Vendor Relationship Management, Infomediaries, and Data Aggregators. It highlights the need for Accountability Frameworks (also called Trust Frameworks) combinations of code and law/policy. This is contextualized in an overall Landscape picture where two other modes of governance also co-exist - Peer Governance and Identifier Governance.
Kaliya and Bob gave this talk as the closing keynote for the Cloud Identity Summit on July 19th, 2012 in Vail Colorado. It discusses a range of issues and options for identity in society. It postulates that social justice or fairness must be an underlying design feature of any system. It encourages people to get involved with the NSTIC process and the current steering committee being formed.
I presented to SDForum Tech Women's group about Identity and Personal Data. I presented and also got input from the women attending about how they understood their own identities and what they want to have happen with their personal data.
3. Core thesis 3 Personal data stores and PDX provide a strong, user-centric foundation for both person-to-person relationships (federated social web) & person-to-business relationships (vendor relationship management)
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7. Phil Windley* on PDX 7 “ One thing we discovered with KRL (Kynetx Rule Language) early on was that interesting rulesets were often going to tie to multiple sets of permissioned data and that having a user go through multiple ‘allow-deny’ ceremonies when they start up was a bad user experience. PDX solves that problem.” * Founder and CTO of Kynetx (kynetx.com) and archictect of Kynetx Rules Language (KRL)
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10. XDI DATA IN PDS 10 =!1111.aaaa.bbbb.cccc <-- =alice --> $is =(http://alice.exampleopenid.com/) =(mailto:alice@mydata.org) $is$a +person +street "100 Main St" +city "Seattle" +zip "98101" +country "USA"