- From: Anders Rundgren <anders.rundgren.net@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 03 Nov 2014 07:35:46 +0100
- To: Web Payments CG <public-webpayments@w3.org>
- CC: "public-webpayments-comments@w3.org" <public-webpayments-comments@w3.org>
This was a lot and also quite interesting. It though confirms my view that there's nothing on the table that could be the foundation for a standard, W3C or other. Mixing JSON-LD, Security Elements, Wallets (client and/or server), EMV, Bitcoins, NFC, and ISO messaging standards is neither meaningful nor feasible. That Apple-Pay is an "App" is also a factor to consider. If we take something related like Google's U2F they did a number of remarkable things: - Google did not consider earlier efforts and standards like ISO 7816 - Google selected a specific and well-defined problem, completely ignoring other possible uses If Google had tried pushing U2F through W3C, the project would probably have failed since committees tend forget timing, pragmatism, the 80/20 rule and most of all that life is about learning. As a comparison I can mention my 7 lost years in TrustedComputingGroup who created the TPM which now is in "zombie-state" only cherished by its originator, Microsoft. The market (including Intel) have turned to TEEs (Trusted Execution Environments) that can be updated on-the-fly which (for good or worse...) is a prerequisite in an ever-changing world. This was early on visible on the radar but turning a ship around after *hundreds of millions of dollars* spent simply doesn't work for committees. Cramming all payment systems into a single API and architecture is a *research project*. So if the goal still is a *standard* we/W3C need to find something quite simple that still makes a change. This probably means shelving 90-95% of the stuff currently on the table. I would also ignore desktop solutions since these platforms develop too slow and are dominated by closed-source operating systems severely complicating third-party innovation. Sincerely, Anders Rundgren WebPKI.org On 2014-11-02 05:01, Manu Sporny wrote: > Hi all, > > Here is a draft version of the minutes for the Web Payments IG meetings > at W3C TPAC 2014. I signed the Web Payments CG up to put together the > drafts and review them for mistakes/vagueness. > > It would be great if some of the Web Payments CG members could review > the minutes ASAP so that we can have them ready for the Web Payments IG > meeting this coming Friday. > > Session 1: https://web-payments.org/minutes/2014-10-27-wpig-s1/ > * Administrivia > * Introduction to Group Members > * Charter review > > Session 2: https://web-payments.org/minutes/2014-10-27-wpig-s2/ > * Related Working Groups: Web Crypto > * Related Groups: Web Payments CG > * Related groups: Credentials CG > > Session 3: https://web-payments.org/minutes/2014-10-27-wpig-s3/ > * Credentials CG Overview (continued) > * SysApps and NFC > * Trust and Permissions > * ISO 20022 > * ISO 8583 > * ISO 12812 > * X9 > * ARTS/NRF UPOS > * EMVCo > * Wallet API > > Session 4: https://web-payments.org/minutes/2014-10-28-wpig-s4/ > * Administrivia for Day 2 > * Wallet API / Payment Agent (continued) > * What is a Wallet? > * The Web Payment Problem > * Push-based Payments > * Web Payments IG Focus > > Session 5: https://web-payments.org/minutes/2014-10-28-wpig-s5/ > * Payment Agent (formally Wallet) > * Web Payments CG Use Cases > * Task Forces > * Future Planning Administrivia > > -- manu >
Received on Monday, 3 November 2014 06:36:38 UTC