From: Heather Flanagan <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Mon, 26 Mar 2018 06:09:58 -0700

Registration is now open for the free to attend RA21 seminar taking place in Philadelphia on 27 April


Register at:  https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/ra21-resource-access-for-the-21st-century-tickets-43700742096

RA21 (Resource Access for the 21st Century), a joint STM and NISO initiative, has been developing pilot technology to improve the user experience of Single Sign-On (via SAML) while protecting privacy.

Benefits of Single Sign-On include:

    • A simple and more effective access experience for your patrons and your library resources,
    • protecting patron privacy in a Single Sign-On environment, and
    • driving greater usage of library resources by delivering a better access experience

Attend this free half day event for an update on the results emerging from RA21


Attendees will learn about the issues addressed within the user experience aspect of the project and the testing of solutions via two pilots. Presentations will also explain how the library community values of protecting privacy are at the centre of the initiative.


The focus of the seminar will primarily be aimed at academic library representatives, however publishers, educational access management federations, vendors and service providers would also be welcome.


Join us to find out more as RA21 moves towards developing best practice recommendations.

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Other March & April events:

 

For further information on forthcoming and past events, please visit the Events page of the RA21.org website.

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Recent RA21 articles:

In The Scholarly Kitchen: Myth busting: Five commonly held misconceptions about RA21 (and one rumor confirmed): RA21 aims to promote a modern, standards-based access management system that preserves patron privacy & control. As the initiative progresses and interest in RA21 increases, it is important to dispel some myths about RA21 so we can move on from the outdated world of IP-authentication. Read the recent article in the Scholarly Kitchen.


The Future of Digital Identity and RA21: In a recent blog post entitled 'The Future of Digital Identity and RA21', Heather Flanagan, Coordinator of RA21's Academic pilots, provides a brief history and overview of federated identity services. The post touches on the differences between commerce-based federated identity (e.g., Google or Facebook services) and explains some of the inherent privacy expectations generally required in an academic identity federation. Finally, the post attempts to put a sense of scale on the level of challenge inherent in identity federation, given the numbers involved, and points out where exactly RA21 is attempting to help solve some of those challenges.