Protecting Online Identity Through Cryptography

Protecting Online Identity Through Cryptography - Via Slashdot: Your Rights Online:

A new startup, Credentica, hopes to offer the ability for you to perform secure transactions using the smallest amount of personal information possible. Their goal is to both protect privacy and enhance security, which they hope will be a mutually inclusive process. "The technique employs secure multi-party computation, a branch of cryptography that can calculate meaningful answers about secret information by knowing only some non-revealing clues about that secret. The underlying theory was demonstrated in 1982 by Andrew Yao in the so-called Millionaire's Problem [...] U-Prove employs an ID token, a special kind of digital certificate that allows for minimal selective disclosure. The tokens can store all kinds of information, but users can disclose only the minimum amount of data required in any given transaction. They leave no unwanted data trails and permit both anonymity and pseudonymity."

(Read Original Article - Via Slashdot: Your Rights Online.)


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Credentica is part of Microsoft now

The article you refer to is from February. They were bought by MSFT in the meantime, including Stefan Brand's patents. Microsoft's lawyers are looking into how to make it available for developers outside the company, says Chief Identity Architect Kim Cameron.

More here and here.

Thanks for the update.

Thanks for the update.
I was catching up with some old items I had planned to post.

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