Re: Leveraging DNS and email addresses

I agree that we need to consider how web clients would use our solutions.  There are active discussions about how to integrate this into the most common web clients (browsers etc.).  As with any meaningful steps forward in technology the various client platforms will adopt the technologies that fit best with user experiences and meet the user needs that they have identified.

Using history as a guide many of the technologies that we considered “low level” have percolated into the web clients, I expect that this follow a similar trajectory.
--
Glen Wiley
Principal Engineer
Verisign, Inc.
(571) 230-7917

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From: Adrian Hope-Bailie <adrian@hopebailie.com<mailto:adrian@hopebailie.com>>
Date: Wednesday, March 25, 2015 at 9:28 AM
To: Wiley Glen <gwiley@verisign.com<mailto:gwiley@verisign.com>>
Cc: Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com<mailto:melvincarvalho@gmail.com>>, W3C Credentials Community Group <public-credentials@w3.org<mailto:public-credentials@w3.org>>
Subject: Re: Leveraging DNS and email addresses

Hi Glen,

I prefer the use of DNS for service discovery over something like WebFinger but it presents a problem for Web clients that don't have access to such low levels in the stack.
We need to consider this in whatever is proposed.

Adrian

On 23 March 2015 at 16:53, Wiley, Glen <gwiley@verisign.com<mailto:gwiley@verisign.com>> wrote:
Melvin,

Some of your points are correct, email addresses are pretty over loaded however is this really an either-or discussion?  Does offering email addresses as a locator prevent discussion of other mechanisms?  It isn’t clear to me how it stalls other work?

One way to avoid an endless debate is to embrace cooperative approaches rather than insisting on a single approach.

One of the ways I have proposed we leverage payment information associations this way is to offer a secured referral to a URI – you can locate the association in the DNS using an email address which then takes you to a resource record that offers a URI.  This can be accomplished by leveraging the chain of trust within the DNS and by leveraging cryptographic assets to make the handoff to the URI (e.g. A certificate or public key).
--
Glen Wiley
Principal Engineer
Verisign, Inc.
(571) 230-7917<tel:%28571%29%20230-7917>

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6A0F DC65 2354 9946 C63A

From: Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com<mailto:melvincarvalho@gmail.com>>
Date: Monday, March 23, 2015 at 10:36 AM
To: Adrian Hope-Bailie <adrian@hopebailie.com<mailto:adrian@hopebailie.com>>
Cc: W3C Credentials Community Group <public-credentials@w3.org<mailto:public-credentials@w3.org>>
Subject: Re: Leveraging DNS and email addresses
Resent-From: <public-credentials@w3.org<mailto:public-credentials@w3.org>>
Resent-Date: Monday, March 23, 2015 at 10:37 AM



On 16 March 2015 at 09:02, Adrian Hope-Bailie <adrian@hopebailie.com<mailto:adrian@hopebailie.com>> wrote:
I have been thinking lately about the challenge of keying an identity in a way that:

  *   Is easy to transfer and remember (even for humans)
  *   Can be normalised in a standard way and used as part of a standardised discovery process by a client to discover the Identity Provider (IdP) for that identity

ASIDE: It's worth mentioning that while we strive for a fully decentralised identity system this will likely be a federated set of IdPs and for a client to traverse this web they need a starting point or primary IdP for an identity. When I talk about the IdP for an identity I am not implying there will be only 1 but that that the key/label for the identity should allow a client to resolve/discover this primary IdP and then from there discover further identity claims as required.

To my mind the obvious solution is to use the email address format as this is already a well-known standard which user's understand.

It seems to me that the only argument against an email address format is that the domain part is often not under the control of the identity owner. I don't see that is a good enough reason to force users to try and change their thinking and use URIs as their identifiers.

I don't have statistics to back this up (perhaps somebody does) but I consider the relative obscurity of OpenID as a login option as evidence that this is a bad idea.

So how do we help the user that has an email address @gmail.com<http://gmail.com> or @hotmail.com<http://hotmail.com> or @yahoo.com<http://yahoo.com> but wishes to host their identity themselves or at a different IdP?

First, we define a mechanism or standard algorithm/protocol for translating their email address into a service discovery process that may start with their home domain but ultimately result in the client accessing the identity somewhere else. Then we pressure the large email providers to abide by this standard. I acknowledge that this may be difficult but I would say it is not impossible.

I imagine the user experience being something like the following:

  1.  I log in to my account with this email provider, go to my account settings and prpvode the URL of my IdP.
  2.  When I use my identity online the client executes the service discovery protocol as defined, contacts my email provider and is given the URL I have configured as part of this process.
  3.  The client negotiates with my IdP of choice to get my identity information.

If we have designed the protocol correctly (very close to what is already in place today) my email provider only knows who my IdP is but nothing more about the identity I have defined their unless I choose to share it.

Where a user has a primary email address with a provider who is not following the standard the user has two choices:


  1.  Change email providers
  2.  Use an identity that is different from their primary email address.

Option 2 can be easily facilitated by any IdP who wishes to play in this space. In conjunction with offering an IdP service they could also allow their identity key (email address) to be used as an email address by the subscriber but simply forward all emails to that address on to the primary email address of the subscriber.

I think the Discovery protocol of OpenID Connect (http://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html) is a good reference of how an email address could be used to discover the user's IdP however I'd be more in favour of leveraging the DNS service discovery protocol (RFC 6763 - http://www.dns-sd.org/).

Is there a compelling case for using a URI as an identity key as opposed to the familar form of an email address?

Let's not go down this path in discussion.  Email is confusing because it's overloaded to do different things:

1. A memorable identifier
2. A global primary key
3. A message delivery service

This stalls meaningful discussion in the standards world, and we end up with failed projects such as persona.

Just using web axioms an email address as an identifier (2) is already a URI by prefixing mailto: (something that most centralized and many 'decentralized' systems forget to do)

In the linked data world we prefer http uris.

This is an endless perma debate that gets in the way of standards.  Let's not go there!


Adrian

Received on Wednesday, 25 March 2015 15:16:38 UTC