Persona-invite
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Do we need an 'easy pass' for the information web?
It would be convenient to have a virtual "easy pass" that worked everyone on the web to identity us for personalization, services and payment. No more multiple user names and passwords; and a single place to park the bits and pieces of your online identity.
But what if there was only one place you could get such a pass? The government? A big company? Like Facebook? Or Google? Or Amazon? What if your "easy pass" from one provider didn't work anywhere else?
That's where we're at with trust and identity on the web today. As a result, information commerce is complicated and confusing. Publishers have no way to invite users to simply make a small payment for information the value.
Eric Schmidt: An alternative to one-company ownership?
Even Eric Schmidt, the chairman of Google, believes the Internet doesn't handle user identity well. "Historically, on the Internet, such a fundamental service wouldn't be owned by a single company," Schmidt told Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher in a May 31 interview. "I think the industry would benefit from an alternative to that."
I'd like to invite you to review and comment on a forthcoming white paper from the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI). It proposes a new public-benefit initiative -- the Information Trust Association -- that could create a world of exchangeable "easy passes" for trust, identity and information commerce. The paper is in circulating-draft form. The title: "From Paper to Persona: Managing Privacy and Information Overload; Sustaining Journalism in an Attention Age."
Here's a link to get started: http://www.papertopersona.org
Check it out, then read on if you want to learn a little more.
DETAILS
The first set of links on the page will also bring you to a 40-minute video discussion/overview recorded April 27.
We're hoping it will spark a critical dialog and collaborative action lead by the news industry.
The paper is organized such that you can access it as a one-page abstract, a three-page executive summary or the full 42-page paper. Almost every page has a boxed callout and subheads to make grazing even easier. Don't put it aside as too long. If you like, just read the first three pages and skim the rest. If you don't get it, we've failed.
It's got two principal sections:
Bill Densmore, Consulting Fellow
Reynolds Journalism Institute
University of Missouri / Columbia
VOICE MAIL/CELL: 617-448-6600
densmorew@rjionline.org @infovalet
DISCLOSURE: http://newshare.com/wiki/index.php/Disclosure