19
The Problem with Federations Nicole Harris enAthens ‘Work Smarter, Not Harder’ Semina March 2011

Openathens seminars

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Openathens seminars

The Problem with FederationsNicole Harris

OpenAthens ‘Work Smarter, Not Harder’ SeminarsMarch 2011

Page 2: Openathens seminars
Page 3: Openathens seminars

Images courtesy of: doug8888, ben-zen-photography, scissorfighter with some

right reserved - Flickr.com

Page 4: Openathens seminars

The Problem with Federations?

A federation (Latin: foedus, foederis, 'covenant'), also known as a federal state, is a type of sovereign state characterized by a union of partially self-governing states or regions united by a central (federal) government. In a federation, the self-governing status of the component states is typically constitutionally entrenched and may not be altered by a unilateral decision of the central government.

The United Federation of Planets, also known as "The Federation" is a fictional interplanetary federal republic depicted in the Star Trek television series and motion pictures. In those episodes and films, the Federation is described as an interstellar federal polity with, as of the year 2373, more than 150 member planets and thousands of colonies spread across 8,000 light years of the Milky Way Galaxy, and taking the form of a post-capitalist liberal democracy and constitutional republic.

A Federation is multiple computing and/or network providers agreeing upon standards of operation in a collective fashion. The term may be used when describing the inter-operation of two distinct, formally disconnected, telecommunications networks that may have different internal structures. The term may also be used when groups attempt to delegate collective authority of development to prevent fragmentation.

Wikipedia, 28th February 2011

Page 5: Openathens seminars

Courtesy of pillowhead_designs on Flickr

Not only Star Trek...

Terran Federation in Blake’s 7 and in Starship Troopers

Trade Federation in Star Wars

Galactic Federation in Doctor Who

The Federation in Shannara (Terry Brooks)

GEEKS LOVE FEDERATIONS!

Page 6: Openathens seminars

Federations are like a pack of cards...

Page 7: Openathens seminars

Courtesy of thesyesism on Flickr

Club RulesCards are meaningless without the

‘rules’ of the game

Can be reorganised to have different meaning - different

games

But cards should be reusable?

Page 8: Openathens seminars

PEER (not BEER)

https://spaces.internet2.edu/display/PEER/Home

Page 9: Openathens seminars

Courtesy of thesyesism on Flickr

Hearts

About giving people access

Should institutions be attempting

to ‘manage’ people?

Logins for Life?

Page 10: Openathens seminars

We first jumped on the OpenID bandwagon back in 2007 when it was seen as a promising way to make logging into websites simpler. What we've learned over the past three years is that it didn't actually make anything any simpler for the vast majority of our customers. Instead it just made things harder. Especially when people were having problems with the often flaky OpenID providers and couldn't log into their account. OpenID has been a burden on support since the day it was launched.-- 37signals drops OpenID support

OpenID is the worst possible "solution" I have ever seen in my entire life to a problem that most people don't really have.  That's what's "wrong" with it.Yishan Wong on Quora

“You have one identity,” Zuckerberg emphasized three times in a single interview with David Kirkpatrick in his book, “The Facebook Effect.” “The days of you having a different image for your work friends or co-workers and for the other people you know are probably coming to an end pretty quickly.” He adds: “Having two identities for yourself is an example of a lack of integrity.”

No one's Facebook account is safe from hackers. Not even the social networking site's founder Mark Zuckerberg's! A fan page dedicated to the site's creator was hacked Tuesday.

Seems like Zuckerberg had been so busy announcing protection measures for Facebook's users that he forgot to protect his own account.The Money Times

Page 11: Openathens seminars

Courtesy of Barbro_Uppsala on Flickr

Celebrate your studentyness

Page 12: Openathens seminars

Courtesy of thesyesism on Flickr

Adding Value

Statistics

Richer Attributes (JISC Collections)

However...

Page 13: Openathens seminars

The DPA of

1998

Page 14: Openathens seminars
Page 15: Openathens seminars
Page 16: Openathens seminars

Courtesy of thesyesism on Flickr

SPADES

ARE

ALWAYS

TRUMPS

Page 17: Openathens seminars

Do federations have a trump

card?

Page 18: Openathens seminars

?SAML is secure in more ways than one

Federations continue to evolve Offers clear advantages in education

and research sector

Organisations like REFEDSoffer fantastic new potential

Page 19: Openathens seminars

Thanks for listening

access.jiscinvolve.org

[email protected]