back to article myOpenID to close down for good in February 2014

MyOpenID, a major provider of open source authentication system OpenID, is set to close for good on February 1st 2014. The free service, provided by self-styled “social login” firm Janrain, was first launched back in 2006 as a way for users to authenticate easily by using just one log-in across a range of sites. However, the …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    and what happens

    To those of us with enough nouse NOT to have Google or Facebook accounts? Where too next then for an OpenID account?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: and what happens

      "To those of us with enough nouse NOT to have Google or Facebook accounts? Where too next then for an OpenID account?"

      With all your nous, can't you come up with something yourself?

    2. JDX Gold badge

      Re: and what happens

      I think you'll find most of us have G/F accounts, but don't want to use them as ubiquitous logins.

      Doesn't StackExchange work primarily on OpenID - I have about a dizen sites all on the same login so that's going to be annoying.

      1. richardcox13

        Re: and what happens

        > Doesn't StackExchange work primarily on OpenID - I have about a dizen sites all on the same login so that's going to be annoying.

        However:

        1. StackExchange has its own openID provider: set up an identity there as the future replacement.

        2. StackExchange has a central identify across all its sites, so you only need to change once. You might need to log into each site (that isn't a sub-domain of stackexchange.com) separately with the change.

        3. You can have multiple logins configured for your StackExchange account. Therefore adding the new identity while still being able to login with the current one.

        Doing this, and updating by domain's default page's link elements away from myOpenId, is now on my to do list...

        OpenID is in so many ways the right approach to identify. However the failure of the various OpenID providers (especially Google in the early days) to provide a consistent approach for the consumers of OpenID logins (the web sites you login to) made it too unreliable and too hard in practice.

    3. bigtimehustler
      Thumb Down

      Re: and what happens

      Yes, because your so intelligent just because you have different opinions and preferences...all these mightier than thou anti google and anti facebook people are really getting boring.

  2. Colin Robbns
    Unhappy

    The end of a pioneering user identity service, the cost of identity evolution I guess. Is this another example of simplicity winning over security? I much rather trust a specialist identity provider - but using my twitter or facebook ID is so much easier.

  3. banjomike
    WTF?

    Another Cloud hazard

    So not only can your data go walkies in the Cloud but your actual identity can as well. The future looks even worse now.

  4. Ian 55

    On the one hand, I'm sad..

    .. on the other, I don't think I have actually used it for a couple of years.

    Dreamwidth.org is a nice clueful blogging site with zero ads (income comes from users paying for more features) and I use that for OpenID.

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Run your own ...

    OK, I only use my OpenID for logging into blogging sites to leave comments. On a free webhost with PHP, I run phpMyID. Probably grossly insecure for logging into on-line banking, so I don't use it for that.

    Have a look at:

    http://siege.org/pub/phpmyid/

    http://intertwingly.net/blog/2007/12/05/phpMyId-0-7

    http://wiki.openid.net/w/page/12995226/Run%20your%20own%20identity%20server

  6. David Gale

    TADAG was always the answer

    Given the way in which a small component of TADAG was ripped off by Microsoft and passed to Brad Fitzpatrick to become OpenID (later sponsored by Microsoft), I have little sympathy for OpenID's demise. The OpenID architectural solution was fundamentally flawed by its lack of access to the bigger picture of TADAG. Now, more than ever, TADAG is desperately needed to effect a paradigm shift in internet security.

    With Balmer on the way out, perhaps its time for me to visit Redmond again?

    David Gale

    Author of TADAG - A copy of the Microsoft requested report is downloadable at: www.TADAG.com

    SITFO.org

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