Ten companies, including several tech vendors, will support the open identity initiative, a pilot program designed to help U.S. residents more easily engage in open government, the companies announced Wednesday.
The goal of the open identity initiative, from the OpenID Foundation and Information Card Foundation, is to assist U.S. President Barack Obama’s effort to make it easy for people to register and participate in government Web sites, without having to create new user names and passwords. Participants in the program will be able to control how much personal information they share with the government, the two foundations said.
The companies participating in the pilot program are Yahoo, PayPal, Google, Equifax, AOL, VeriSign, Acxiom, Citi, Privo and Wave Systems
The companies will provide digital identities using OpenID and Information Card technologies. The pilot programs are being conducted by the U.S. Center for Information Technology (CIT) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and other agencies.
Obama signed an open government memorandum earlier this year, and federal agencies have been looking at Web 2.0 technologies as ways to interact with the public.
The goal of this initiative will help transform government Web sites from basic “brochureware” into interactive resources, saving people time and increasing their direct involvement in government, OpenID and Information Card said.
Under the two foundations’ open trust frameworks, any organization that meets the technical and operational requirements will be able to apply for certification as an identity provider. These identity providers can then supply authentication credentials on behalf of their users. For some activities, these credentials will enable the user to be completely anonymous; for others they may require personal information such as name, e-mail address, age and gender. Open trust frameworks enable citizens to choose the identity technology, identity provider and credential with which they are most comfortable, while enabling government Web sites to accept these credentials, the foundations said.
“Open government cannot and will not compromise either security or privacy,” Drummond Reed, executive director of the Information Card Foundation, said in a statement. “By working with private industry, the U.S. government is harnessing the innovation and efficiencies of the open market and letting citizens choose their preferred means of engaging with government agencies.”
The OpenID Foundation is an international nonprofit, open-source organization whose mission is to drive the broad adoption of OpenID technology. The Information Card Foundation is an international nonprofit whose mission is to advance simpler, more secure, and more portable digital identity on the Internet.