- From: Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2012 17:09:17 +0200
- To: Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net>
- Cc: Robin Wilton <wilton@isoc.org>, Ben Laurie <benl@google.com>, public-identity@w3.org, "public-privacy@w3.org list" <public-privacy@w3.org>, public-webid@w3.org, "saag@ietf.org" <saag@ietf.org>
- Message-ID: <CAKaEYhJR31GQTCYuT32cCXj3bPUk1iHOgT8rPD+k=paT=hGVZw@mail.gmail.com>
On 24 October 2012 17:00, Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net> wrote: > > On 24 Oct 2012, at 16:24, Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > On 24 October 2012 16:03, Kingsley Idehen <kidehen@openlinksw.com> wrote: > >> On 10/24/12 8:03 AM, Nathan wrote: >> >>> Robin Wilton wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> On 24 Oct 2012, at 10:30, Ben Laurie wrote: >>>> >>>> On 23 October 2012 10:58, Robin Wilton <wilton@isoc.org> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On 23 Oct 2012, at 09:44, Ben Laurie wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> <snip> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Not disagreeing with any of the above, but observing that: >>>>>> >>>>>> a) There's no particular reason you could not have an email per site >>>>>> as well as a key per site. >>>>>> >>>>>> b) Linkability it not, as you say, inherently bad. The problem occurs >>>>>> when you have (effectively) no choice about linkability. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> But it's very hard to use either of those mechanisms (separation >>>>>> through >>>>>> emails or keys) without giving some third party the ability to >>>>>> achieve total >>>>>> linkability. (In other words, both options remove effective choice). >>>>>> >>>>> I agree that emails are a problem, but not at all sure why keys are? >>>>> In the case of appropriate selective disclosure mechanisms, even if >>>>> there were a third party involved, they would not be able to link uses >>>>> of the keys. Also, if you insist on using linkable keys, then per-site >>>>> keys do not involve third parties. >>>>> >>>>> >>>> It may just be that I'm not getting a clear mental picture of your >>>> architecture. But here was my thinking: >>>> - If you use symmetric keys, you get a system which can't scale unless >>>> you opt for Schneier's idea of a key server… but then the key server >>>> becomes a point of potential panopticality. >>>> >>>> - If you use PKI, *and* you want your communicating parties to be able >>>> to validate the certs they're relying on, then you have to design a CRL- or >>>> OCSP-like mechanism into the architecture, and again you end up with a >>>> component which is potentially panoptical. (Plus, you have to address the >>>> 20-year-old problem of how to make PKI usable by human beings, when recent >>>> history suggests that PKI only takes off where human beings are kept well >>>> away from it). >>>> >>> >>> CRL is pretty much built in to WebID, if you remove a public key from >>> the document pointed to by your uri-identifier, then it's no longer valid >>> for use in WebID - auth can't happen, rendering the cert useless for WebID. >>> >> > +1 Nathan. > > ( btw. It is always good to point people to the spec too > http://webid.info/spec is the short url for it. ) > > >>> >>> >>> >> For sake of clarity, Nathan is speaking about the WebID authentication >> protocol. >> >> A WebID on its own refers to an resolvable (de-referencable) identifier. >> The WebID protocol verifies the aforementioned identifier (entity >> denotation mechanism) via a combination of cryptography and entity >> relationship semantics oriented logic. > > > Kingsley, thanks for pointing this out. > > I think some of the confusion arises from the fact that a webid is > sometimes not that clearly defined, and people focus on the protocol. > > > The spec has a definition that seems pretty reasonable, ( though I think > we should remove the reference to "intentions" ) > > http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/webid/spec/#terminology > > WebIDA URI that refers to an Agent - Person, Robot, Group or other thing > that can have Intentions. The WebID should be a URI which when dereferenced > returns a representation whose description uniquely identifies the Agent > who is the controller of a public key. In our example the WebID refers to > Bob<https://dvcs.w3.org/hg/WebID/raw-file/tip/spec/index-respec.html#dfn-bob>. > A WebID is usually a URL with a #tag, as the meaning of such a URL is > defined in the document refered to by the WebID URL without the #tag . > > > > In particular a WebID is a URI that references an Agent (human or machine) > > Similarly, email will become WebIDs using the webfinger spec (when that's > complete) > > It can be argued that OAuth/OpenID identifiers are also WebID but with a > different auth protocol. > > Mozilla persona, although certainly useful, would possibly not fit into > the same category, as they use a proprietary identification system. > > The whole idea is that WebID brings things together at an architectural > level. "The WebID Protocol", certs, X.509 are implementation details > really. > > > I would not say just implementation details. From the philosophical theory > of reference > ( eg: Gareth Evans's book: The variety of Reference ) they may be, but in > everyday usage > how these things are implemented is quite important, and so are the > distinctions. > > According to the WebID spec definition: > - OpenID is close [1] though they have a URL for a web page rather than > an agent (not a big deal), but more importantly they don't make use of the > URL to get the attributes, which is what WebID does. They certainly don't > publish the public key in the OpenId profile. > - webfinger does indeed give a method to dereference a mailto: uri, > which could be used for a WebID protocol. > the current draft of webfinger allows dereferencing a mailto: URI ... in fact it is anyURI > - I don't think OAuth is working with URIs at all > - Mozilla Persona could use WebIDs [2] and it would improve their > protocol so dramatically, it is evident that they will at some point. > > Henry > > [1] https://blogs.oracle.com/bblfish/entry/what_does_foaf_ssl_give > [2] > http://security.stackexchange.com/questions/5406/what-are-the-main-advantages-and-disadvantages-of-webid-compared-to-browserid > > > >> >> >> -- >> >> Regards, >> >> Kingsley Idehen >> Founder & CEO >> OpenLink Software >> Company Web: http://www.openlinksw.com >> Personal Weblog: http://www.openlinksw.com/**blog/~kidehen<http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen> >> Twitter/Identi.ca handle: @kidehen >> Google+ Profile: https://plus.google.com/**112399767740508618350/about<https://plus.google.com/112399767740508618350/about> >> LinkedIn Profile: http://www.linkedin.com/in/**kidehen<http://www.linkedin.com/in/kidehen> >> >> >> >> >> >> > > Social Web Architect > http://bblfish.net/ > >
Received on Wednesday, 24 October 2012 15:09:50 UTC