OmegaFenix
The Legendary Troll Hunter
So in my morning scan of my feed subscriptions I came across this gem:
Source
The very first comment on this piece is this:
Now though I see the point this first poster is trying to make and concede that the possibility exists for a hacker\identity thief to cause all different kinds of chaos in your life, I do see the positive effects such a system could have.
I have not yet had the time to do more in depth research on this exact subject to try and determine exactly how it will work but am curious to hear your thoughts on this.
Prepare yourselves, my fellow Americans, for the coming age of the National Internet ID.
What's that oppressive-sounding thing, you ask? Why, ask the President Obama, who has moved forward with plans to give each American an online ID as part of an ambitious—and currently ambiguous—cybersecurity initiative that will be headed up by the U.S. Commerce Department.
Now, before you panic about national ID cards or huge, expanding governments, Commerce Sec. Gary Locke wants to assure everyone that this program won't encompass any of those slippery slope ideas whatsoever.
What it will do, he said, is more akin to providing each U.S. citizen with a single online ID with which to sign into multiple sites, pages and platforms. Confused? Great, because this is governing we're talking about here, and that's the idea.
Officially called the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace, the program is expected to solidify over the next few months so hopefully there will be more to report in the spring.
Again, ambiguity is currently the word surrounding this simplified online ID program, which isn't ironic at all and shouldn't be feared by anyone. [CBS News via Engadget]
Source
The very first comment on this piece is this:
Being someone who about two months ago got both of their gmail accounts, facebook, paypal, ebay, and amazon accounts all compromised by the same person in the same day (same user names and passwords), I cannot express with words how bad of an idea this is.
I can see the utility of this, and understand why they think it is a good idea. Having a universal log-in for all your federal governmental business is convenient and helps people remember a single name/password combination. My day was ruined by the person who got into all my personal files (I've since changed all the passwords to unique passwords and user names) and that only had to do with my email, facebook statuses, and ebay feedback. I still have to tell people that I didn't get mugged in Scotland (the story they were emailing my friends, fellow professors, family, it was a nightmare).
Can you imagine the havoc a malicious person could wreak on a person if they had a password combination that gave them access to someone's federal loans, IRS, Social Security, any and all online federal applications, and whatever else is managed online these days? It's like giving them the master key to someone's identity.
It is simply a bad idea and actually complicates a system that already works unless the user fails to pick a good user name/password combination.
Now though I see the point this first poster is trying to make and concede that the possibility exists for a hacker\identity thief to cause all different kinds of chaos in your life, I do see the positive effects such a system could have.
I have not yet had the time to do more in depth research on this exact subject to try and determine exactly how it will work but am curious to hear your thoughts on this.