Skip to main content /TECH with IDG.net
CNN.com /TECH
CNN TV
EDITIONS





Amex joins Liberty Alliance, Microsoft ponders

itworld.com

By Matt Berger

(IDG) -- The list of companies signing on as members of the Liberty Alliance Project continues to grow, with American Express (Amex) saying that it's joining the industry effort to create a common technology for identifying users on the Internet.

Launched in September by Sun Microsystems and about other 30 companies and IT vendors, the Liberty Alliance is working to build a shared authentication system that enables Web users to access password-protected Web sites and perform other online transactions without entering personal information in each instance.

IDG.net INFOCENTER
Related IDG.net Stories
Features
Visit an IDG site


American Express has been actively taking part in the project since its inception in September but hadn't yet gone public with its involvement, said Marge Breya, vice president of SunONE (Open Network Environment), one of Sun's divisions taking part in the Liberty Alliance. In fact, there are some 13 member companies keeping mum about participation in the effort, she said.

"We decided to let each member come forward with its involvement," Breya said. "It's just one of those things, even from the get-go, we've decided we would respect the privacy of participating companies."

The Liberty Alliance Project has surfaced as a competitor to Microsoft's Passport authentication service, the single sign-on technology that allows its subscribers to visit participating Web sites without signing on to each of those sites.

Passport members include users of Microsoft's free e-mail service Hotmail, as well as subscribers to several other Web sites such as those run by Starbucks and Victoria's Secret. Microsoft has also positioned Passport as the sign-on service for the collection of Web services it's developing, called .Net My Services.

Microsoft suggested in September that it would consider joining the Liberty Alliance if the authentication platform it develops is based on an open standard. Breya said Microsoft reaffirmed that stance in a conversation she had Monday with Microsoft executive Charles Fitzgerald, director of business strategy for Microsoft's platform strategy group.

"He confirmed that the company was considering membership," she said. "I really hope they will join."

If Microsoft linked its Passport system to the effort underway with Liberty Alliance, it would create a vast network of Web sites and Web service that would share a common technology for authenticating users.

Internet giant America Online (a sister AOL Time Warner company to CNN.com) says it will be taking part in the project, adding its 32 million members to the fray. Other member companies such as RealNetworks, United Airlines and American Airlines also bring large pools of Internet users to the effort.

Adding up the subscribers of each member company, the Liberty Alliance has more than 1 billion Internet users who would be able to travel the Web with a single identity and access Web sites and services from participating companies, Breya said. If Microsoft added its Passport system to the group, it would add about 200 million more users.

Members of the Liberty Alliance have been meeting since Tuesday to discuss the technical and business strategies behind the project. No specifications of the shared authentication technology have been announced yet, and the group isn't expected to publicly announce any details until mid-2002, Breya said.

"We do know that it must be a lightweight and pretty simple technology so it can be a nice common denominator for all the members," she said. "It's got to be such that many different industries from wireless to financial services can make use of it."



 
 
 
 


RELATED STORIES:
• AOL joins Liberty Alliance Project
December 6, 2001

RELATED IDG.net STORIES:
RELATED SITES:

Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.


 Search   

Back to the top