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Welcome to CAMP! Ken Klingenstein, Director, Internet2 Middleware Initiative.

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Presentation on theme: "Welcome to CAMP! Ken Klingenstein, Director, Internet2 Middleware Initiative."— Presentation transcript:

1 Welcome to CAMP! Ken Klingenstein, Director, Internet2 Middleware Initiative

2 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 2 Overview CAMP Goals Workshop Context A word from our sponsors A word about NMI-EDIT

3 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 3 Goals of CAMP: Authentication Overview/Deployment Overview of deploying authentication WebISO technologies Update on directory activities Inter-institutional authorization and leveraging campus authentication

4 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 4 Goals of CAMP Develop contacts from other institutions implementing middleware Learn about current research Take home ideas to help remove those roadblocks on your campus Benchmark your own implementation against current higher-ed practices

5 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 5 Thanks to our CAMP “Program Committee” Mike Berman –CSU Pomona Kent McKinney –CSU Hayward Bill Winn –Bradley University

6 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 6 A Word From Our Sponsors National Science Foundation’s Middleware Initiative (NMI) NMI – Enterprise Desktop Integration Technologies (EDIT) Consortium Internet2 – primary on grant and research EDUCAUSE – primary on outreach Southeastern Universities Research Association (SURA) – primary on NMI Integration Testbed …with support from Sun Microsystems Inc.

7 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 7 NMI-EDIT: Goals Create a ubiquitous common, persistent and robust core middleware infrastructure for the R&E community Provide tools and services (e.g. registries, bridge PKI components, schemas, root directories) to support inter- institutional and inter-realm collaborations

8 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 8 NMI-EDIT: Core Middleware Scope Identity and Identifiers – namespaces, identifier crosswalks, real world levels of assurance Authentication – campus technologies and policies, inter-realm interoperability via PKI, Kerberos Directories – enterprise directory services architectures and tools, standard object classes, inter- realm and registry services Authorization – permissions and access controls, delegation, privacy management Integration Activities – common management tools, use of virtual, federated and hierarchical organizations

9 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 9 A Map of Middleware Land

10 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 10 NMI-EDIT: Strategic Direction Overall technical direction set by MACE –Middleware Architecture Committee for Education (MACE) –Bob Morgan, University of Washington, Chair –Campus IT architects and representatives from Grids and International Communities Directions set via –NSF and NMI management team –Internet2 Network Planning and Policy Advisory Council –PKI, FOO and Directory Technical Advisory Boards –Internet2 members

11 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 11 Sample NMI-EDIT Process: Directories MACE-DIR Working Group –Prioritize needed materials – Establish subgroups revision of basic documents (LDAP Recipe) new best practices in groups and metadirectories standards development for eduPerson 1.5 and eduOrg 1.0 –Work in enhanced IETF approach: scenarios, requirements, architectures, recommended standards stages –Announce deliverables; start input and conference call review/feedback processes; reconvene work groups as needed Process schedule and requirements –4-6 months for completion, depending on product –6-8 primary contributors –15-50 schools participating

12 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 12 NMI-EDIT: Participants Higher Ed – 15-20 leadership institutions, with 50 more campuses represented as members of working groups; readership around 2000 institutions Corporate – (IBM/Metamerge, Microsoft, SUN, Liberty Alliance, DST, MitreTek, Radvision, Polycom, EBSCO, Elsevier, OCLC, Baltimore Technologies) Government – NSF, NIST, NIH, Federal CIO Council International –Terena, JISC, REDIRIS, AARnet, SWITCH

13 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 13 The pieces fit together… Campus infrastructure – Name space, identifiers, directories – Enterprise authentication and authorization – Portals and LMS’s Inter-realm infrastructure – edu schemas – Exchange of attributes Inter-realm Upperware – Grids – Digital libraries – Video

14 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 14 Middleware as Infrastructure It serves both academic and administrative units It serves both instructional and research missions It must be reliable, scalable, extensible, ubiquitous, and transparent. It must be deployed, which requires real technical, financial and political processes.

15 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 15 Middleware as Art There is no proven policy path Much depends on local legacy systems Much depends on local legacy people Much of the technology base is being invented as we meet

16 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 16 The Last Six Months in Middleware Directories –Eduperson – new attributes, passions about vocabulary, new pressures for internationalization –CommObject becomes H.350 –Metadirectories… Shibboleth – grows to v1.0, libraries and content providers drive deployments, federations take shape Enterprise, federated Chandler is hatched

17 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 17 The Last Six Months in Middleware Desktop video – what’s proving hard PKI – needs grew, CREN died… DRM – wins and losses OKI – fits and starts Portals – growing consensus on a few standards

18 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 18 Drivers for federations At least four technologies… –Shibboleth, Liberty Alliance, Federated.NET, PAPI from RedIris (Spain), perhaps PKI Several business needs –Internal exchanges –Inter-institutional collaboration –Federal e-authentication initiative Deployments now beginning

19 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 19 Origin Side Architecture

20 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 20 The Next Six Months in parts of Middleware Federations A Higher Ed CA Chandler Signed email Credential convertors and identity mapping OGSA Shibbing collaboration tools DRM

21 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 21 Federations and Classic PKI They are very similar –Both imply trust models –Federations are a enterprise-enterprise PKI –Local authentication may well be end-entity certs –Name-space control is a critical issue And they are very different –End user authentication a local decision –Flat set of relationships; little hierarchy –Focus as much on privacy as security –Web Services only right now: no other apps, no encryption –We get to define…

22 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 22 Overall Trust Fabric

23 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 23 The Next Two Years in parts of Middleware Desktop video Authzanity A Higher Ed Bridge CA Federated enterprise P2P Virtual organization support Federated directories Middleware diagnostics

24 CAMP - June 4-6, 2003 24 Getting the Most Out of CAMP Conventional wisdom is not wisdom Its about deployments We have met the enemy… Friday morning consulting Netequitte The creek path Stay engaged


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