Microsoft's
forthcoming
Internet
Explorer 7 will support the Infocard authentication system as part of the
WinFX programming model, Bill Gates revealed in his
opening keynote at the
RSA Conference
in San José.
The software giant is touting the security technology as a replacement for
user names and passwords.
Gates said that progress had been made towards a better level of computer
security, claiming that 90 per cent of computer users say that spam is no longer
a major problem.
"We are making progress but it's a very big challenge to make sure that
security is not the thing that is holding us back," he told delegates at the
security conference.
"We have an overly complex situation today. We have to have simplicity in
mind. If we don't do this right, we won't get the results that we need."
Infocard is Microsoft's next-generation online authentication system, which
aims to improve online security while reducing complexity for users.
A major potential benefit is its ability to limit the disclosure of
information through the use of a federated identity
system.
Such a system allows software to rely on claims made by other applications
instead of requiring users to sign in. Microsoft first
unveiled its federated identity plans at
Digital ID World
last year.
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