In Context

June 19, 2009

Privo Information Card

Filed under: — paul @ 10:15 am

privoPrivo, Microsoft and Azigo have announced Privo Puts Parents in Charge Online with Information Cards.

Denise Tayloe (CEO of Privo) is friend, colleague and an expert in the field of protecting children online. Denise has created web services for major online businesses that other experts have told me “can’t be done” while adhering to COPPA.

Azigo and Microsoft, each in different ways, have been very supportive of Denise, Privo, and the general concept that child-protecting solutions could be based Information Cards as a technology foundation. For our part, Privo’s new card issuing site is powered by Azigo CardPress. But our relationship goes much further. For example, last year Denise and I co-authored a paper that we submitted to the Berkman Center’s Internet Safety Technical Task Force. [I should dig that up and put a link to it]. Their final report is here. I blogged about it here.

February 1, 2009

Towards an eCitizen

newyorkerdogI gave this talk entitled Towards an eCitizen at a very stimulating conference Jan 15th at the MIT Media Lab. It was organized by Dazza Greenwood, Bruce Bakis (MITRE) and others associated with the eCitizenFoundation.

I tried to motivate why we needed trusted user [identity] agents, multiple, contextual identities, selective disclosure, etc. by trying to answer the question “why can’t dogs vote?”

It was great fun. Mary Ruddy and Charles Andres did demos of registered voter Information Cards being issued by CivicID.org and consumed by BigDialog.org.

January 16, 2009

Child Safety Report: a replacement for the Bible

Filed under: — paul @ 12:09 pm

A new report Enhancing Child Safety & Online Technologies by the Internet Safety Technical Task Force at Berkman apparently can support any interpretation of the issues. Here’s the spectrum:

Report Calls Online Threats to Children Overblown –NY Times on Jan 14th. where Brad Stone’s lead is “The Internet may not be such a dangerous place for children after all.”

to:

The Case for Age Verification –WSJ on Jan 16th. In that article WSG Bloomenthal (AG for Connecticut) is interviewed. He says:

I view the report as a step forward in the fight to better protect children from predators and inappropriate content on social networking sites. … The profoundly significant plus in my view is that it clearly acknowledges and advances technologies to better shield kids from predators and inappropriate content.

and more to the point (emphasis added):

The report identifies 40 technologies that can make sites safer now, including age and identity verification tools. I am going to be working with other attorneys general to urge social networking sites to immediately begin implementing these technologies, especially age and identity verification.

The social networks want to appear to be protecting children but actually doing so simply doesn’t make economic sense. It would cost money, it would introduce some friction in the login interaction, and it might reduce the number of duplicate user accounts (thus impacting their advertising rates). On the revenue side, they apparently don’t think that doing so will attract more users.

Lacking an economic incentive, the efforts of the AGs are critical. Sadly, the NY Times article works counter to their efforts.

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