Obligatory first post introduction
Welcome. Let’s get right to it. Why are we here? You, I don’t know. Hopefully you are looking for the content we will build together here. Me, I’m here to blather about my thoughts on a wide variety of online identity, privacy and general online or digital life issues. Hopefully, this will very much be a two-way discussion where we kick around ideas started here or in other sites covering the same topics, so chime in.
Since this is my kick-off post, it seems there are a couple launch items we should get out of the way:
- Who the heck is Tim Renshaw?
- What is the affiliation with TriCipher, Inc. my employer?
- What is going to be discussed here?
You can check out my bio here on the TriCipher, Inc. web site.  I am a married guy, no kids, two dogs, who has worked in the e-commerce space certainly since joining CheckFree back in 1998. My two main hobbies are electronic gaming of all kinds and on all platforms and fishing, you know for actual fish like bass, not phishing. We’ll get to that in due course :-). I have been involved in IT matters and technology as part of my career since the late 80s when PCs and networks exploded throughout the Bank enterprises where I worked.  As a result, I got sucked into technology and found it appealled to me much more than the actual banking business did.  A lot of hands-on hours later mucking around in the guts of PCs, networks and servers I ended up working in the audit department of Banc One, now part of JPMC, where I was exposed to not only being audited but what a good auditor and audit process accomplishes.
Needless to say, all along the way security has been a day to day concern, both for the user communities I served, and as everything increasingly came online to the larger world, concern for my own servers and systems.  Authorization and authentication issues were part of daily, real world management and implementation.  Walking the line of enforcing security and audit policy while trying to keep my support calls and general user unhappiness from escalating has been part of my daily thought process for years.  Additionally, while at CheckFree working on various bill presentment and payment products, the clear linkage between user authentication, account authentication and fraud relationships made a distinct impression.
Which brings me to my current employment / affiliation at TriCipher, Inc.  I joined the company, then called SingleSignOn.Net in 2001 after being introduced to their novel digital credential technology developed into a deployable product. I’m still with the company, now TriCipher, after 6 years because what I saw then as an effective and workable answer to the issues of strong authentication, reliable identity, federated identity, digital signing, personal data controls and privacy / anonymity issues are unfortunately, only now being seriously addressed in the internet e-commerce and emerging inter-social-blogo-web2.0-mobile-multidevice world.  All that being said, this is not going to be an ad site for TriCipher, however, I am also not going to try and mask the fact that I am a huge advocate for our technology or that I come from a pro-TriCipher technology point of view.  I don’t believe anyone can be completely objective about things they truly believe in and I believe in strong, easy to use, digital credentials and I believe TriCipher Armored Credentials are all that and a bag of chips.  The items posted here will be mine alone and by no means are to be taken as official TriCipher statements, policy or (insert your own typical legal CYA-speak here). So there, that’s out of the way.
Last on my “first post list” is what are we going to be disccussing here?  Well if it hasn’t become clear at this point I’m going to be posting about issues loosely around: strong authentication, reliable identity, federated identity, digital signing, personal data controls and privacy / anonymity issues as well as how these relate to the things we like to do online:  shop, chat, game, blog, consume and interact with various digital media.  Roughly stated, I’m going to speak my mind on items relating to our ever emerging online life and the issues that matter to those of us that consider online as an important part of what comprises our overall lives.  Where it goes from there is up to you, the readers and hopefully posters.
February 16th, 2007 at 12:49 pm
I look forward to future postings. Hopefully you will provide insight that others don’t…