(What is implications? - Edit Wiki)
Videos 1 to 30
The Changing Landscape of Energy Law: Administrative Law Review Symposium - Panel 1: Climate Change Legislation: Domestic and International Implications
from Washington College of Law Podcast October 03, 2008
If Congress passes climate change legislation, (1) what is the most desirable form of such legislation; and (2) how would the new law be enforced? Will efforts to achieve climate change legislation be successful? What are the benefits/drawbacks of various climate change proposals? How do domestic legislative efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions account for the existence of international climate change arrangements? Moderator: William Snape, Professor, Washington College of Law " Cynthia Marlette, General Counsel, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission " Vicki Arroyo, Director of Policy Analysis, Pew Center on Climate Change " Jonathan Black, Professional Staff member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources " Bruce Harris, Chief Policy Advisor - Energy & Air Quality, serving the Honorable John D. Dingell, Chairman, House Energy & Commerce Committee
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India's New Patent Regime: TRIPS Implications
from Washington College of Law Podcast April 20, 2007
Professor Shamnad Basheer (visiting at George Washington) speaks on India's new Patent Regime: TRIPS Implications. Professor Basheer completed a bachelor of civil law degree with distinction at Oxford as a Shell Centenary scholar, where his thesis dealing with biotechnology and patent law in India was awarded the second prize in a writing contest held by the Stanford Technology Law Review. He is currently an associate with the Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre and is a Wellcome Trust scholar in the doctoral program at Oxford. His research interests include patents and developing countries and the interface between patents and antitrust. He is currently authoring a book on Indian patent law.
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Episode #35 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) July 18, 2006
In this episode of I interview Peter Davis of NeuStar. In this podcast Peter and talk about how he got involved in digital identity first at UUNET, then at NeuStar and also through an affiliation with XRI.org and i-Names. We conclude by talking about NeuStar's recent announcement with Cordance of the Global I-Names Registry. Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes Technorati tag: stodid
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Episode #34 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) July 11, 2006
In this episode of I interview Dale Olds, Distinguished Engineer at Novell and leader of the Bandit project. Dale Olds was Awarded the Distinguished Engineer title at Novell in 2002. Dale was the lead designer and implementor of NDS and eDirectory from 1990 to 2000. He is currently working on the evolution of directory services. Previous work includes applications for NetWare 2.15 and 3. Dale is listed as an inventor on 8 patents and has received Novell's Edison, President's, and Inventor Hall of Fame awards. His recent industry experience focused on Linux and internet content delivery services. Dale has a BS in Computer Science from the University of Utah. Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes Technorati tag: stodid
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Episode #33 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) July 05, 2006
In this episode of I interview Conor Cahill of Intel Corp., formerly of AOL Inc., and a member of the Liberty Alliance throughout. Conor and I talk about his involvement in the early days of Liberty and how Microsoft's Hailstorm project was a catalyst for both the development and architecture of the Liberty protocols. In addition we discuss the Liberty's People Service and Conor shares his views on the viability of a single identity protocol. Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes Technorati tag: stodid
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Episode #32 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) June 27, 2006
In this episode of I interview Sal Cali who is CEO/President and Founder of SRCTechnologies, Inc and Scott Pollack COS/EVP of SRC Technologies. What peaked my interest in this company was a series of claims they made regarding the patented technology and it's unhackability . Equally interesting is their claim that their technology is the closest emulation of the human ever created in computing and is based on heuristic artificial intelligence, which learns and makes predictions. In this episode I spoke to Sal and Scott to try to get a deeper understanding of the technology they've developed and to learn more about their plans regarding the implementation and licensing of their technology. Show Notes: SRCTech Inc. Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes Technorati tag: stodid
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Episode #31 of Stodid (Part II of II)
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) June 21, 2006
In this episode of I interview: Eric Norlin & Joseph Jaffe President and Founder of Connecticut-based jaffe, L.L.C. and author of the new book, Life After the 30 Second Spot. Joe also writes the Jaffe Juice weblog. Show Notes: Fred Stutzman's Facebook research Facebook (the dark side) Bruce Sterling: Internet of Things Tony Perkins on PodTech Audio Links: - Listen to Episode I (MP3) - Listen to Episode II (MP3) - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes Technorati tag: stodid
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Episode #31 of Stodid (Part I of II)
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) June 11, 2006
In this episode of I interview: Eric Norlin & Joseph Jaffe President and Founder of Connecticut-based jaffe, L.L.C. and author of the new book, Life After the 30 Second Spot. Joe also writes the Jaffe Juice weblog. Show Notes: Fred Stutzman's Facebook research Facebook (the dark side) Bruce Sterling: Internet of Things Tony Perkins on PodTech Audio Links: - Listen to Episode I (MP3) - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes Technorati tag: stodid
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Episode #30 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) June 06, 2006
In this episode of , I interview Fred Stutzman, co-founder of . Fred is a Ph.D. student at the University of North Carolina, and the co-founder of ClaimID. Originially from Albany, NY, he is currently located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Fred's academic interests include identity representation, social software, the net-generation, and social effects of technology. ClaimID, created by Fred and Terrell Russell, is a step in that direction. Of particular interest (at least to me) is Fred's description of his research regarding the use of Facebook among college age students and changing conceptions of what privacy means. Also note that in the weeks since completing this podcast, ClaimID has added MicroID-based link verification, which is going to be an integral part of ClaimID's verification services. To learn more see what Terrell (ClaimID co-founder) has been working on with OpenID and multi-factor authentication - ClaimID is going to seriously turn some heads when we launch this initaitive. Show Notes: - ClaimID - Fred's Google Tech Talk: Our Lives, Our Facebooks Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes Technorati tag: stodid
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Episide #29 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) May 30, 2006
In this episode of I interview Dave Evans of Corante fame. Dave's interests in identity began with his early work with identity management systems in 1997. His primary focus is on the benefits of identity and attention systems to both consumers and advertisers. In this episode Dave describes what he calls the Identity stack (his view of identity from a marketer's perspective). Included in that stack are companies such as: Low Layer = Data Providers Trufina RapLeaf Upper Layer = Data and Reputation Aggregators: Opinity iKarma Root Markets ClaimID ZoomInfo Identity Management Buzz from Sun Microsystems (iTunes) Audio Links: - Listen to this Episode (MP3) - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episode #28 of Stodid (a.k.a. #27 Part II)
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) May 23, 2006
In this episode of I continue my interview with Johannes Ernst, Dick Hardt User Centric episode, was inspired by listener feedback and input. Specifically, the following listeners contributed their questions and ideas which culminated in this episode. My sincere thanks to each and everyone of them: Julius Huijnk (Netherlands), Neil Macehiter (UK) & Greg Balanko-Dickson (Canada) Other show notes: Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episode #26 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) May 09, 2006
In this episode of I interview Brett McDowell of the Liberty Alliance. Brett and I spoke about a number of subject, including Liberty's projection that 1 billion identities will be Liberated during 2006. We also spoke about Brett's role at Liberty and whether Microsoft's InfoCard will interoperate with Liberty's protocols among other things. Other show notes: - The Story of Digital Identity - Please add yourself to the Frappr Map! - Jerry Falwell - Project Liberty Audio Links: - Listen to this Episode (MP3) - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episode #25 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) May 02, 2006
In this episode of I interview Jaco Aizenmann. Jaco Aizenman is contributing to the development Virtual Rights, a new set of Human Rights. He serves as a director on the board of XDI.org. He is also the founder and Consortium Development Coordinator of the Free Software Consortium that created the Free Software Act, a new legislation that can protect FLOSS (Free/Libre and Open Source Software) and the CEO of a small internet satellite access provider in Costa Rica. Mr. Aizenman has worked extensively on Information and Communication Technologies for human development. Among others he had worked on the Inter-American Development Bank, the World Bank Development Gateway, Lincos, and Gilat. He also led the universalization of the email and website account in Costa Rica. In this interview we talk about: 1. How he first became interested in digital identity, 2. The four human dimensions, 3. The Digital Identity Metasystem, 4. The Fundamental Human Right of a Digital Identity, 5. How it's seems unlikely that two guys from Central America (me from Guatemala and he from Costa Rica) would appear on a podcast about digital identity. Other show notes: - VP Human Right - Constitutional amendment - About VRI - VP & Extreme poverty Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episode #24 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) April 24, 2006
In this episode of I interview Christopher Zannetos, President and CEO of Courion. Mr. Zannetos was a co-founder and is currently CEO of Courion and is responsible for setting Courion's strategic direction. Under his leadership since 1996, the company has built a customer base of over 250 customers, including 60 of the Fortune 500, and has been recognized as a leader in the Enterprise Provisioning market with a number of awards including the Upside Hot 100, Computerworld's Emerging Companies to Watch, SC Magazine Global Award for Best Identity Management Solution, eWEEK Excellence Award for Best Authentication and User Management Product, and the Harold Short Award given annually to the single most innovative technology in the IT Service industry. Zannetos is co-chair of the TechNet CEO Cybersecurity Task Force and sits on the Digital ID World (DIDW) Industry Advisory Board. In this interview Mr. Zannetos I ask Mr. Zannetos to give the audience a quick introdocution to Courion. We also discuss the strategic drivers of Courion's business and why he believes facilitating both compliance and security are the keys to Courion's continuing success. Last we briefly discuss the concept of federated provisioning . Show Notes: - Internet Identity Workshop Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episode #23 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) April 19, 2006
In this episode of I interview Bill Washburn and Tom Maddox of Opinity. Founded in 2002, Opinity is the first online personal reputation services company. Based in San Jose, California, the company's management team has 40 years of combined experience in high technology. Wongyu Ted Cho, chief executive officer, and Doyon Kim, chief product officer, founded successful Internet start-ups Dialpad Communications and Serome Technology, growing large-scale web services from inception to acquisition. The following is taken from Opinity's Market information (see): Anonymity is both the best and the worst aspects of the Internet. It liberates users from the superficial limitations of age, ethnicity, and gender; however, it also conceals the identities of unscrupulous users. Opinity's online reputation services protect individuals and businesses from the negative effects of anonymity without sacrificing the benefits of privacy. Opinity is the first online reputation services company. It is the only organization to offer a consolidated view of quantitative and qualitative data from multiple online and offline sources. Opinity offers insight into individuals' past history on the web rather than business ratings such as those offered by BizRate, and Opinity's services are open to anyone who interacts or transacts business on any website rather than being a closed ratings system such as that offered by eBay. Instead of inviting government to intervene in Internet commerce due to lax security, Opinity is leading the private sector to non-intrusive self-regulation. By partnering with Opinity, peer-to-peer companies give their customers access to a well-rounded view of the reputations of others with whom they may choose to interact and transact business. Having the data to make informed decisions makes interactions and transactions safer and more reliable. This, in turn, builds credibility and trust among customers and assures repeat and referred business. Opinity gives individuals access to the information they need to make smart decisions regarding their peers on the Internet. Using Opinity, they can interact, buy, and sell with confidence. It also gives them the ability to evaluate and manage their own reputations, including control over the level of disclosure of personal information. Show Notes: - Opinity's Blog - John Postel - Elliot Maxwell - GIS - Edufacts - Trufina - Authentify Audio Links: - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episode #22 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) April 11, 2006
In this episode of I interview Dr. Bruce Hoppe. Dr. Hoppe, is the founder of Connective Associates, and is a nationally acclaimed expert on network optimization with combined expertise in technology and organizational development. A leading authority on applying social network analysis to accelerate business results, Bruce has helped many Fortune 500 companies to optimize their operational networks with his groundbreaking decision-support tools. Bruce has also led numerous community renewal programs. He was a professor of operations research at Rice University and received his PhD in computer science from Cornell University. Bruce writes a widely acclaimed blog, Connectedness, full of practical and thought-provoking insights on business applications of social network analysis. In this interview Dr. Hoppe and I speak about various aspects of social network analysis (SNA). In addition we talk about the connections between the field of SNA and digital identity. Show Notes: - Bibliography for Social Network Analysis - Bridging What Machines Can't do by Robert Joseph Thomas Audio Links: - Listen to this Episode (MP3) - Subscribe to this Podcast - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episide #20 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) March 29, 2006
In this episode of I interview Mary Ruddy, VP of Marketing and Business Development at Parity Communications and co-sponsor (with Paul Trevithick) of the Higgins project at the Eclipse Foundation. Prior to joining Parity Communications, Mary was Vice President, Strategic Marketing at Parametric Technology Corporation (NASDAQ:PMTC). Before PTC, she was VP Strategic Alliances at OpenOrders, where she helped sell the company to IBMÃïÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂs WebSphere Commerce Suite software group. Prior to OpenOrders, she was VP Advanced Products at Pegasystems (NASDAQ:PEGA). Mary was a early employee at Pegasystems, which is a developer of rules-based process automation software. Mary started her career as a Member of the Technical Staff at the MITRE Corporation contributing to advanced command, control, communications and intelligence systems. Mary has a degree in Mathematics from Smith College and holds a MSM from the MIT Sloan School of Management. In this interview we talk about Parity's role in the Higgins project. We also discuss Higgins project goals and how they align with the objective of creating a user centric identity metasystem. Show Notes: - Higgins - Higgins in the news - Parity Communications - Social Physics - Eclipse Links: - Subscribe to this podcast's feed - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episide #19 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) March 22, 2006
In this episode of I interview Robin Wilton, Corporate Architect in Sun Microsystem's CTO Team. Robin's post titled, Is 'user-centricity' the answer to identity fraud? was the impetus for my interview with him because it addressed some issues related to user-centric identity and various types of liability we've been thinking about with regard to identity providers (those entities in the user-centric model that will issue claims on behalf of the individuals who use their services). In this interview Robin describes his job at Sun and we talk in some detail about the concept of user-centricity and how in many contexts intermediaries will necessarily play a role despite end-user control of their digital identity. Show Notes: Crystal Meth Addicts and ID fraud Bruce Schneier Willie Sutton Mass Data Compromise Links: - Subscribe to this feed - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episide #18 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) March 15, 2006
In this episode of I interview Ben Adida. Ben is a PhD student in the Cryptography and Information Security Group at MIT. He studies cryptographic solutions to public policy problems, including secure elections, anti-phishing, online identity, and secure health records. He has published research on a number of topics including: Cryptography and Computer Security Obfuscated Ciphertext Mixing, previously Public Mixing Ben Adida and Douglas Wikstram preliminary version on eprint.Lightweight Encryption for Email - [PDF] [Bibtex] Ben Adida, Susan Hohenberger, and Ronald L. Rivest Proceedings of Usenix Symposium on Reducing Unwanted Traffic on the Internet (SRUTI 2005), July 2005.Lightweight Signatures for Email - [PDF] Ben Adida, David Chau, Susan Hohenberger, and Ronald L. Rivest preliminary version in the DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce, April 2005.Ad-Hoc Group Signatures from Hijacked Keypairs - [PDF] Ben Adida, Susan Hohenberger, and Ronald L. Rivest preliminary version in the DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce, April 2005.Self-Describing Cryptography Through Certified Universal Code - [PDF] [PS] Master's Thesis, MIT 1999 Technology Policy Evaluation of Voting Systems - [PDF] [Bibtex] P.L. Vora, B. Adida, R. Bucholz, D. Chaum, D.L. Dill, D. Jefferson, D.W. Jones, W. Lattin, A.D. Rubin, M.I Shamos, and M.Yung in Communications of the ACM, November 2004. SHOW NOTES: - Bruce Schneier - Creative Commons - Berkman Center for Law & Society (Harvard Law School) Links: - Subscribe to this feed - Subscribe via iTunes
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Episide #17 of Stodid
from The Story of Digital Identity (a.k.a. Stodid) March 06, 2006
In this episode of I interview, Dick Hard Founder and CEO of Sxip Identity. A pioneer in the Internet sector and open source software community, Dick has been active in software development for nearly two decades. Prior to founding Sxip Identity, Dick founded ActiveState in 1997. Under his leadership as CEO, ActiveState became a leader in open source programming languages and anti-spam software and was acquired by UK-based software company, Sophos in 2003. His first commercial software work started in 1986 at Consumers Software where he ported one of the first LAN email packages, the Network Courier, to Windows 1.03. He later joined Paradigm Development, which did software consulting for firms such as Aldus, Adobe and Microsoft. In 1993 Dick connected Paradigm to the Internet and later founded hip Communications, which became one of the larger web development and hosting companies in western Canada. While running hip, Dick led the port of Perl 5 to the Windows platform, which resulted in an interest in open source software. hip was sold to a NASDAQ company. As a successful entrepreneur and technology expert, Dick is very involved in the technology community, speaking at numerous conferences and holding a board position with the Vancouver Enterprise Forum. He previously was on the board of the BCTIA and Ludicorp. He is a Business in Vancouver Top 40 Under 40 award recipient. Dick has also demonstrated leadership in funding the Major Projects Fund for the BC Technology Social Venture Partners, a charitable foundation to support groups serving children, women at risk and people living in Vancouver's downtown eastside. Show Notes: - Sxip Identity, Inc. - ActiveState (Activestate.com via Wayback machine) - Salesforces.com - API (Definition at Wikipedia) - DIX @ IETF - Blame.ca - Identity20.com Links: - Subscribe to this feed - Subscribe via iTunes
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