Mozilla launches Persona identity management system

We know that by using one login name and one password for all your accounts is just a great way of letting hackers gain access to all your accounts in one fell swoop, but Mozilla thinks otherwise and has launched the official beta of Persona, the company’s identity management system. Basically what it does is that instead of having websites authenticate the user, the authentication will be based on a decentralized system and by choosing one password, you will have the option of logging in to multiple websites.

In a way it’s kind of like how by signing into your Google account, you can access your mail, calendar, Google+ account and etc., although in Persona’s case it will let you log into different websites that aren’t necessarily owned by the same entity. Of course websites will need to support Persona and so far Mozilla has listed The Times Crossword, OpenPhoto and Voost as some of the sites who currently support Persona logins. It sounds like a pretty convenient solution, although we’d hate to think of the mess and chaos that will ensue if hackers gain access to user passwords, but if you don’t mind giving the beta try, head on over to Mozilla’s website for the details.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: ZTE has plans for Mozilla phone launch in early 2013, New JavaScript technology will speed up Firefox 18,

Mozilla Persona sign-in launches in beta, skips the social networking ball and chain (video)

Mozilla Persona signins launch in beta, skip the social networking ball and chain

We all know those web pages where the only alternative to a site-specific login is a social networking account. That’s not very reassuring for anyone skittish about linking their commentary to a Facebook account relatives might see, if they’re even willing to join a social network in the first place. Mozilla has been aware of that hesitation long enough to have just released its long-in-development Persona sign-in service as a beta. Although it has the same kind of simple approach to a login as a Facebook or Twitter pop-up window, Persona’s emphasis is on privacy: it stops paying attention the moment credentials go through, keeping any diatribes or subscription details from landing in social streams or central databases. Users don’t have to play a rousing game of guess-the-username, either, as they just need to sign in with one or more familiar e-mail addresses and a single password. Persona faces an uphill battle in getting web developer adoption when the establishment sign-in services are open to hundreds of millions of internet citizens, but it does have The Times’ online crossword section, OpenPhoto and Voost as early poster children — and anything that lets the privacy-minded join the party has our vote.

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Mozilla Persona sign-in launches in beta, skips the social networking ball and chain (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 18:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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