Let's Talk About Digital Identity

Digital Identity Buzz: Passwordless, Identity Wallets & Digital Money with Heather Flanagan, Spherical Cow Consulting and David Birch, 15Mb


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Let's talk about digital identity with Heather Flanagan, Principal at Spherical Cow Consulting and David Birch, Principal at 15 Mb, author, advisor and commentator on digital financial services.
This is the 100th episode of Let’s Talk about Digital Identity – in this special episode two of our most popular guests, Heather Flanagan and David Birch, rejoined the podcast to explore what is exciting them in passwordless, identity wallets and digital money.
[Transcript below]
"Passwords have got to go. As we're moving to passkeys, I think there's always room for improvement on - even on them. If nothing else, focusing a little bit more on the user experience so that people will have a better understanding of what this means."
Heather Flanagan, Principal at Spherical Cow Consulting and choreographer for Identity Flash Mob, comes from a position that the Internet is led by people, powered by words, and inspired by technology. She has been involved in leadership roles with some of the most technical, volunteer-driven organisations on the Internet, including IDPro as Principal Editor, the IETF, the IAB, and the IRTF as RFC Series Editor, ICANN as Technical Writer, and REFEDS as Coordinator, just to name a few. If there is work going on to develop new Internet standards, or discussions around the future of digital identity, she is interested in engaging in that work.
Listen Episode 74, where Heather discusses Making Identity Easy for Everyone or connect with Heather on LinkedIn.
“The thing that's broken in digital money at the moment, is identity, not the payment bit.”
David G.W Birch is an author, advisor and commentator on digital financial services. Principal at 15Mb, his advisory company, he is Global Ambassador for the secure electronic transactions consultancy, Consult Hyperion, Fintech Ambassador for Digital Jersey and Non-Executive Chair at Digiseq Ltd. He is an internationally-recognised thought leader in digital identity and digital money. Ranked one of the top 100 fintech influencers for 2021, previously named one of the global top 15 favourite sources of business information by Wired magazine and one of the top ten most influential voices in banking by Financial Brand, he created one of the top 25 “must read” financial IT blogs and was found by PR Daily to be one of the top ten Twitter accounts followed by innovators (along with Bill Gates and Richard Branson).
His latest book “The Currency Cold War—Cash and Cryptography, Hash Rates and Hegemony” (published in May 2020) “paints a fascinating and stimulating picture of the future of the world of digital payments and its possible impact on the wider global and economic orders” – Philip Middleton, OMFIF Digital Monetary Institute. His previous book “Before Babylon, Beyond Bitcoin: From money we understand to money that understands us” was published in June 2017 with a foreword by Andrew Haldane, Chief Economist at the Bank of England. The LSE Review of Books said the book should be “widely read by graduate students of finance, financial law and related topics as well as policy makers involved in financial regulation”.  The London Review of Books called his earlier book “Identity is the New Money” fresh, original, wide-ranging and “the best book on general issues around new forms of money”.
More information is available at dgwbirch.com and you can follow him @dgwbirch on X.
Listen to Episode 75 with David discussing Digital Currencies or connect with David on LinkedIn.
We’ll be continuing this conversation on X using #LTADI – join us @ubisecure!
Go to @Ubisecure on YouTube to watch the video transcript for episode 100.
Podcast transcript
Oscar Santolalla: This is episode number 100 of Let’s Talk About Digital Identity. And for this special occasion, we have invited back Heather Flanagan, and David Birch.
Let’s Talk About Digital Identity, the podcast connecting identity and business. I am your host, Oscar Santolalla.
We have invited back to the show two of our most popular guests. So, these two guests, let me introduce them is Heather Flanagan. She is Principal at Spherical Cow Consulting and Acting Executive Director for IDPro. Hello, Heather.
Heather Flanagan: Hello, Oscar.
Oscar: Nice having you back.
And our second guest is David Birch. David Birch is an author, advisor and commentator on digital financial services. He is Principal at 15 Mb, his advisory company. Hello, David.
David Birch: Hi. Thanks for having me.
Oscar: It's a real pleasure having you both for this special episode, a bit different style, so being out of our usual script. But yeah, hearing a little bit more about yourselves.
So, I’d like to hear something in particular, because we want to hear something - a moment in your lives. So, what I want to hear – think of one specific moment in your career in which you told yourself, “Yes, this is why I love working in the identity industry.” Which moment would it be? Who wants to start?
David: Well, and it’s a bit self-centred, but probably when my publisher agreed to publish my first book. I thought I had some interesting ideas about identity – I mean you always think that your ideas are - but when you get that kind of validation that your ideas actually are interesting to other people. That really did change my career. Yeah, otherwise, I probably would have just carried on being a pretty average consultant and carried on in payments and banking. So yeah, it's – but I put it all down to my publisher.
Oscar: Which one was this book? Tell us which book was this.
David: Identity is the New Money. It was Diane Coyle, the Economist, who encouraged me to publish it. So yeah.
Oscar: Fantastic. Heather?
Heather: I don't have anything. I've been actually thinking about this question for a while, and it's really hard to point to any one thing, because there were no lightning from the sky moments. It's just, it's always been such a foundational aspect of everything that I've ever done since I started in tech in the mid ‘90s. Where the first question was always - when you're taking over something from a bulletin board system to an email server, “Who can access this? What permissions do they need to have? How do you set up accounts for them?” That was where everything always started. So, no one moment, it's all of the moments.
Oscar: Well, that's great that there are several exciting moments. I'm sure for all of us, it's been like that. Several moments in which we feel that this is exciting to be in this industry. But thank you for sharing that with us.
Being already towards the end of this year 2023 - so there are some keywords which were buzzing in the last years. But some of these buzzwords today are more reality, we have access to those. What do you think, what you feel about these technologies or techniques. And let's get started with passwordless. So, if I ask Heather, what excites you today about passwordless?
Heather: I'm really excited about the fact that the technology itself is solid, the standards themselves are really, really well-done. But as excited as I am, I am concerned. Like at all the new modern technologies, I look at them and go, “Wow, that's really cool.” and little anxiety making because for passwordless, what I observe is when you actually get out of the tech field and talk to my mother, she doesn't trust it because it's too easy.
And so, I do wonder about as bad as passwords are, the friction that they add, it's something that people can wrap their heads around. Whereas they don't understand the magic that's happening behind the scenes that makes passkeys better. And if they don't trust it, they won't use it. And if they don't use it, we lose out on all the benefits. So, one of the things I've been trying to think about for you know, the future is OK passkeys are amazing, but how can we make them less magic scary?
David: I'm a bit frustrated with it really, because I'm extremely lazy. And so, you know, like eBay, for example, uses passkeys, the whole thing works perfectly. So as soon as I go to a site, as in fact I just did 10 minutes ago to look at something and it’s log back in. I’m like, “What I have an account? I didn't even know I had the account.” And then I had to remember the password. And of course, I didn't get it. So, I had to click on, I forgot my password, and then I got the password reset. And then I put in the new password. And it said, “You can't have a new password that’s the same as the old password.” And we just go around in this loop. And it drives me crazy. I'm like, “Why can't you just all implement this?” Despite the fears of your mom, which I mean I can't discount those because they're real. The sooner we make people stop using passwords, the better.
I was reading a fantastic story in the Insider this morning. Did you see this story about the Zelle fraud on Insider? It’s typical kind of thing, you know, guys getting some work done by a contractor. The hackers get into the contractor’s email account, they send him a thing to send money to a different account, which is the hackers’ account. And they make off with all of the money. And so, they go and talk to the contractor and said to him, “You know, did you know that your email has been compromised, you should change your email password.”
And the guy, it says in the article, “We may as well have been speaking Romanian.” The guy had absolutely no idea what they were talking about. Because he's a normal person. He doesn't care about all of this stuff. You don't say to people, “Oh, here's a car, would you like a seat belt with it? Or would you like a piece of string that you could attach in, you know, particularly opt in place.” You know, as a society, it comes to a point where you say, “I'm sorry, not wearing seatbelts, there's just too many people dying. So, cars have to have seatbelts. And you have to put the damn things on. End of story.”
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Let's Talk About Digital IdentityBy Ubisecure

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