US Federal E-Authentication and Higher Education
March 28, 2007 | Leave a Comment
The United States federal government has been working on an E-Authentication project actively since 2003 in response to the E-Government Act of 2002. Movement has been slow, but there are many federal agencies now leveraging this infrastructure in a federated manner. For more details about the initiative, there is the publicly available Burton Group Report on the Federal E-Authentication Initiative. For an updated view see the GCN article, E-Authentication maps out its future.
Since then, there has been work to bridge both Liberty Alliance and Shibboleth-based federations with the e-Government services. Involvement also extends to the Post Secondary Electronic Standards Council (PESC) who is working with all these organizations to assure higher education is appropriately represented. Certainly NSF Fastlane and Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) seem like the most obvious first candidates to work with higher education institutions.
With all the activity surrounding the federal government deploying these services in a federated method, institutions should definitely be getting their internal infrastructure in place to support and interoperate with one of the major federations (InCommon, eGovernment, etc).
Tags: "liberty alliance", act, authentication, burton group, e-authentication, eauth, eauthentication, egovernment, fafsa, fastlane, federal, federated, federation, financial aid, gcn, government, higher education, identity, identity management, idm, incommon, initiative, liberty, pesc, pki, shibboleth
