Published: October 08, 2008
InCommon Reaches Major Expansion Milestone
ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- InCommon(R), the first nationwide
identity and access management federation for higher education, today
announced that its community now includes 107 institutional participants and
over two million end users.
This major milestone highlights the rapid adoption of federation trust
principals and technologies that improve security and provide a better
individual experience. Through a federation, organizations can provide access
to online resources, but individuals only need one "home" account. Because
federation members agree to certain policies and standards-based technologies,
this arrangement also preserves a user's privacy.
"As the educational environment has evolved with the advent of networked
resources and distance learning technologies, our community increasingly
relies upon complex resource partnerships to achieve its missions," said Clair
Goldsmith, Special Assistant for Information Technology of the University of
Texas System, and chair of the governing InCommon steering committee. "The
research and education community is thrilled with the growth of InCommon and
federated identity as it allows our campuses both large and small to have
greater control over our users' personal information while at the same time
providing us a more scalable and secure means to share online materials and
critical applications."
Today, InCommon provides users at universities and colleges across the
country with access to a wide variety of online resources from major service
providers. These services include course management systems, library database
services, multimedia content, and career center systems and tools. Users can
also access student discount services and computer software downloads from
major corporations.
An identity federation is an association of organizations that uses a
common set of practices and policies to exchange information about their users
and online resources. College students, faculty and staff, for example, can
use their university user IDs to gain access to resources from any federation
resource provider. This greatly simplifies transactions among federation
members and makes it easy to establish working agreements.
"Exponential growth in mobile computing, social networking, and scholarly
collaboration, both in learning and amongst research teams, has created new
challenges for universities to develop secure and scalable environments that
can effectively allow these collaborations to happen," said Lois Brooks,
Stanford University's director of academic computing and vice-chair of the
InCommon Federation steering committee. "InCommon addresses these challenges
by equipping universities with the necessary infrastructure to interconnect
these services and resources in ways that encourage the free flow of
scholarship."
In addition, resource providers no longer need to maintain individual user
accounts, since they can provide protected content to multiple campuses and
universities using InCommon's single sign-on system.
"Microsoft's participation in the InCommon Federation provides us with a
more seamless and scalable pathway to collaborating with our important
university partners," said Jim Pinkelman, director of U.S. Academic Relations
for Microsoft. "We look forward to working with the Federation to engage
members of the university community in a new way by extending a more user- and
privacy-friendly environment that can provide access to a wider array of
Microsoft's online resources."
There will be a track sessions about InCommon and its growing community at
the Internet2 Fall Member Meeting held inNew Orleans, LA -- October 13-16,
2008. For more information on the InCommon session, visit:
http://events.internet2.edu/2008/fall-
mm/sessionDetails.cfm?session=10000150&event=911 (Due to the length of this
url please copy and paste it into your browser)
For more information on InCommon and a full list of participants, visit:
http://www.incommon.org
About InCommon(R)
The InCommon Federation provides higher education institutions and their
sponsored resource partners with unparalleled privacy, security, and
scalability for accessing protected online resources. InCommon is based on the
concept of federated administration enabling participants to become part of an
association of organizations that agree on a set of attributes and policies to
exchange information about their users for access to restricted resources. As
a limited liability company, InCommon is operated by Internet2 and managed by
an independent Steering Committee representing the higher education and
research community. For more information, visit http://www.incommon.org
SOURCE Internet2
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