InCommon Policy Conference April 2005. 2 Uses  In order to encourage and facilitate legal music programs, a number of universities have contracted with.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Leveraging Your Existing Campus Systems to Access Resource Partners: Federated Identity Management and Tales of Campus Participation EDUCAUSE 2006 October.
Advertisements

Federated Digital Rights Management Mairéad Martin The University of Tennessee TERENA General Assembly Meeting Prague, CZ October 24, 2002.
Dr Ken Klingenstein Shibboleth and InCommon: An Update and Next Steps.
2006 © SWITCH Authentication and Authorization Infrastructures in e-Science (and the role of NRENs) Christoph Witzig SWITCH e-IRG, Helsinki, Oct 4, 2006.
Information Resources and Communications University of California, Office of the President Current Identity Management Initiatives at UC & Beyond: UCTrust.
Information Resources and Communications University of California, Office of the President UCTrust Implementation Experiences David Walker, UCOP Albert.
InCommon and Federated Identity Management 1
EAuthentication in Higher Education Tim Bornholtz Session 58.
Shibboleth Update a.k.a. “shibble-ware”
Collaboration & InCommon EDUCAUSE Midwest Regional Conference March 21, 2005 Carrie E. Regenstein UW-Madison.
1 Update on the InCommon Federation, Higher Education’s Community of Trust EDUCAUSE 2005 October 19 10:30am-11:20am.
1 Leveraging Your Existing Campus Systems to Access Resource Partners: Federated Identity Management and Tales of Campus Participation Clair Goldsmith,
Credential Provider Operational Practices Statement CAMP Shibboleth June 29, 2004 David Wasley.
Welcome to CAMP Identity Management Integration Workshop Ann West NMI-EDIT EDUCAUSE/Internet2.
Federations and Security: A Multi-level Marketing Scheme Ken Klingenstein Director, Internet2 Middleware and Security.
EDUCAUSE PKI Working Group Where Are We and Where are We Going.
Project Shibboleth Update, Demonstration and Discussion Michael R Gettes Duke University (on behalf of the entire shib team!!!) June.
Australian Access Federation Robert Hazeltine Identity and Access Management Enterprise Systems Office.
The InCommon Federation The U.S. Access and Identity Management Federation
Dr Ken Klingenstein Shibboleth and InCommon: An Update and Next Steps.
1 The Partnership Challenge Higher education’s missions are realized in increasingly global, collaborative, online relationships –Higher educations’ digital.
1 The InCommon Federation John Krienke Internet2 Spring Member Meeting Tuesday, April 25, 2006.
Federations: success brings new challenges Ken Klingenstein Director, Internet2 Middleware and Security.
Internet2 – InCommon and Box Marla Meehl Colorado CIO 11/1/11.
1 The InCommon Federation, Higher Education’s Community of Trust: Why join and how to do it EDUCAUSE 2005 Pre-Conference Seminar October 18 8:30am-Noon.
Australian Access Federation and other Middleware Initiatives Presented at TF-EMC2, Prague 4 Sep 2007 Patty McMillan, The University of Queensland.
Shibboleth & Federations Renee’ Shuey May 4, 2004 ITS – Emerging Technologies The Pennsylvania State Universtiy.
InCommon Update Internet2 Meeting April 20, 2004 Ken Klingenstein and Carrie Regenstein.
Identity Federations: Here and Now Renée Shuey Penn State and InCommon.
Shibboleth federations: A Publisher’s Perspective Ale de Vries Product Manager ScienceDirect Elsevier Terena EuroCAMP Malaga, October 18-19, 2006.
NSF Middleware Initiative Renee Woodten Frost Assistant Director, Middleware Initiatives Internet2 NSF Middleware Initiative.
Presented by: Presented by: Tim Cameron CommIT Project Manager, Internet 2 CommIT Project Update.
Federations 101 John Krienke Internet2 Fall 2006 Internet2 Member Meeting.
Shibboleth Update Advanced CAMP 7/31/02 RL “Bob” Morgan, Washington Steven Carmody, Brown Scott Cantor, Ohio State Marlena Erdos, IBM/Tivoli Michael Gettes,
Using Levels of Assurance Well, at least thinking about it…. MAX (just MAX)
Federations: InQueue to InCommon Renee Woodten Frost 19 April 2004.
Shibboleth at Columbia Update David Millman R&D July ’05
Internet2 Middleware Initiative Shibboleth Ren é e Shuey Systems Engineer I Academic Services & Emerging Technologies The Pennsylvania State University.
Shibboleth: Status and Pilots. The Golden Age of Plywood.
Project Shibboleth Update, Demonstration and Discussion Michael Gettes May 20, 2003 TERENA Conference, Zagreb, Croatia Michael Gettes.
1 Protection and Security: Shibboleth. 2 Outline What is the problem Shibboleth is trying to solve? What are the key concepts? How does the Shibboleth.
National Authentication and Authorization Infrastructures and NRENs Ken Klingenstein Director, Internet2 Middleware and Security.
Internet2: building and using an advanced network environment for research, teaching and learning APRU CIO Forum, 23 March 2007 Heather Boyles,
INTRODUCTION: THE FIRST TRY InCommon eduGAIN Policy and Community Working Group.
State of e-Authentication in Higher Education August 20, 2004.
Community Sign-On and BEN. Table of Contents  What is community sign-on?  Benefits  How it works (Shibboleth)  Shibboleth components  CSO workflow.
University of Washington Identity and Access Management IEEAF – RENU Network Design Workshop Seattle - 29 Nov 2007 Lori Stevens, Director, Distributed.
Shibboleth: Molecules, Music, and Middleware. Outline ● Terms ● Problem statement ● Solution space – Shibboleth and Federations ● Description of Shibboleth.
AAI in Europe ++ Ken Klingenstein Director, Internet2 Middleware and Security.
Welcome to Base CAMP: Enterprise Directory Deployment Ken Klingenstein, Director, Internet2 Middleware Initiative Copyright Ken Klingenstein This.
Federations: The New Infrastructure Speaker Name Here Date Here Speaker Name Here Date Here.
Shibboleth Update January, 2001 Ken Klingenstein, Project Director, Internet2 Middleware Initiative Chief Technologist, University of Colorado at Boulder.
Identity Management, Federating Identities, and Federations November 21, 2006 Kevin Morooney Jeff Kuhns Renee Shuey.
InCommon® for Collaboration Institute for Computer Policy and Law May 2005 Renee Shuey Penn State Andrea Beesing Cornell David Wasley Internet 2.
INTRODUCTION: THE FIRST TRY InCommon eduGAIN Policy and Community Working Group.
InCommon Update FedEd Meeting June 16, 2004 Carrie Regenstein.
Welcome to CAMP Directory Workshop Ken Klingenstein, Internet2 and University of Colorado-Boulder.
Shibboleth for Middle Schools James Burger -
1 Identities and Federation: The Next IT Wave (The Canadian Access Federation) Rick Bunt President The Canadian University Council of CIOs (CUCCIO)
01 October 2001 “...By Any Other Name…”. Consequences and Truths (Ken) The Pieces and the Processes (Bob) Directories (Keith) Shibboleth and SAML (Scott)
INTRODUCTION TO IDENTITY FEDERATIONS Heather Flanagan, NSRC.
Community Sign-On and BEN. Table of Contents  What is community sign-on?  Benefits  How it works (Shibboleth)  Shibboleth components  CSO workflow.
Tom Barton, Senior Director for Integration, University of Chicago
John O’Keefe Director of Academic Technology & Network Services
InCommon Steward Program: Community Review
Michael R Gettes, Duke University On behalf of the shib project team
Internet2 Middleware & Security/University of Michigan
Shibboleth: Status and Pilots
Internet2 Middleware & Security/University of Michigan
4th Annual Conference on Technology and Standards Washington
Presentation transcript:

InCommon Policy Conference April 2005

2 Uses  In order to encourage and facilitate legal music programs, a number of universities have contracted with Napster to provided discounted programs for student access to popular music.  How should the university provide access to those materials from authenticated users?  This is a job for Shibboleth!

3 Uses  History professor at Cornell who wants to partner with a NYU professor in an urban history class.  Each professor has digitized materials for this class, and that they want to use to compare and contrast.  Eighty students, two professors and two teaching assistants who want to move seemlessly between each of the institutions and among all of the materials for the course.  Must have authenticated services, but do not want nor have the authority to give network identifiers for each institutions: This is a job for Shibboleth!

4 Uses  International team, doing earthquake simulation, made up of researchers from Australian National University, USC and Kyoto.  All three members require access to research data owned by Southern California Earthquake Center stored at USC.  All three members require access to HPCC: High Performance Computing Center at USC. This is a job for Shibboleth!

5 InCommon can help make sharing protected online resources easier  InCommon is… a formal federation of organizations focused on creating a common framework for trust in support of research and education… whose purpose is to facilitate collaboration through the sharing of protected resources, by means of an agreed-upon, common trust fabric.  The InCommon federation is intended to support production-level end- user access to protected resources by providing the means to allow organizations to make effective decisions about sharing resources, based upon the attributes presented by a requester.  Risk and Trust between resource and credential providers will drive technology and policies

6 InCommon, LLC Management  Governance Steering Committee – Carrie Regenstein - chair (Wisconsin- Madison), Jerry Campbell, (USC), Lev Gonick (CWRU), Clair Goldsmith (Texas System), Mark Luker (EDUCAUSE),Tracy Mitrano (Cornell), Susan Perry (Mellon), Mike Teets, (OCLC), David Yakimischak (JSTOR) Internet2 Member – Ken Klingenstein  Operations – Internet2 InCommon Certificate Authority –Issuing the enterprise certificate signing keys Identity proofing the enterprise (Registry Authority) Metadata and Certificate submission User Interface Hosting the WAYF (Where Are You From) interface Supporting campuses in posting their policies

7 InCommon Pilot  11 Phase One participants Cornell University Dartmouth College Elsevier The Ohio State University Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) Penn State University at Buffalo (SUNY) University of California, Irvine University of California, San Diego University of Rochester University of Washington

8 InCommon The InCommon federation allows Higher Ed institutions to share information and resources between themselves and their business partners in a trusted, standardized fashion that protects privacy, respects copyright, and fosters collaboration and innovation. It provides the trust framework for organizations to make decisions about user access to protected resources based on privacy- preserving attributes presented by the user’s home institution.

9 Etymology  shibboleth 1382, the Heb. word shibboleth "flood, stream," also "ear of corn," in Judges xii:4-6. It was the password used by the Gileadites to distinguish their own men from fleeing Ephraimites, because Ephraimites could not pronounce the -sh- sound.

10 Prerequisites  Official University Directory Deploying a single, unique electronic identifier  Federation: Trust Community Associations of enterprises that come together to exchange information about their users and resources in order to enable collaborations and transactions  Middleware: Implementing Technology Identifier Federating software Common language IT framework with focus on security and privacy policies

11 Shibboleth Architecture (still photo, no moving parts)

12 Collaboration & Technology: Shibboleth v  Open-source, standards-based, privacy-preserving federating software  Global development InCommon National Science Digital Library SWITCH (Swiss Network) Finland, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Australia  Commercial information providers in production JSTOR Elsevier “Science Direct” Ohio LInk.  Growing international development interest providing resource manager tools, list software, etc. 

13 Future of InCommon Collaboration among several hundred participants Layered levels of authentication assurance Interoperability with state and/or regional federations “Gateways” with commercial federations And it’s all possible in higher education’s culture of technology, collaboration, and challenge!