MySpace eases data portability policies, adopts OpenID

July 22, 2008, 12:32 PM —  IDG News Service — 

Two well-known Web sites have completed implementations of MySpace's data portability program, which has also been modified to allow a degree of user data caching and storage by external Web sites and to support the OpenID single sign-on method, MySpace announced Monday.

The moves represent the latest enhancements to the MySpace Data Availability Initiative, launched in May with big-name partners Yahoo, eBay, Twitter and fellow News Corp. unit Photobucket, and opened broadly to any Web site last month.

With this program, MySpace wants to let its members take their public profile data to other Web sites, so that they don't have to re-enter that information manually multiple times. MySpace's Data Availability Initiative is one of several projects from vendors and industry groups that seek to make data portability a reality for end users, Web application developers and site publishers.

The goal: to automate and give end users control over the process of entering and updating social profile information and content like biographical facts, personal interest lists, friend contacts, photos, videos, text comments and so on.

For now, the MySpace effort is designed to let its members carry to other sites their public basic profile information, like their bios, interests, favorite music and movies, as well as their photos and videos. Changes made to these elements on their MySpace profiles will be dynamically updated on the third-party sites.

Users will also be able to decide to drop a site from their network of updates, which is key to privacy and security principles. MySpace members have a control panel to manage their "data availability" parameters. Eventually, MySpace would like to extend the effort to allow members to bring in data and content that they have entered into other sites, making the exchange bidirectional.

In the meantime, with the new OpenID support announced Monday, MySpace will let its members create a unique URL with which they can log into sites that support this open digital identity framework. That way, members will not have to remember log in information for every site they register on.

In addition, while the founding partners are still working on their implementations, Flixster and Eventful have become the two largest sites to go live with the MySpace initiative. At Flixster and Eventful, MySpace members will be able to automatically replicate and synchronize their profile information and find MySpace friends.

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Where Google Chrome security fails: the password
I heard mention that the Chrome OS will have some sort of encryption available a la bitlocker. If it's possible to encrypt personal data using another password or key, then it may have potential for very secure data.... And Ubuntu has an 'encrypt home directory' option, perhaps google should follow suit.
- Dann

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