I offer the following for your consideration.
Disintermediation: an Amazon parable
by Kim Cameron, IdentityBlog
Disintermediation: an Amazon parable
by Kim Cameron, IdentityBlog
New York TImes Technology ran a story yesterday about the publishing industry that is brimming with implications for almost everyone in the Internet economy. It is about Amazon and what marketing people call “disintermediation”. Not the simple kind that was the currency of the dot.com boom; we are looking here at a much more advanced case...
We could call the elimination of bookstores “first degree disintermediation” - the much-seen phenomenon of replacement of the existing distribution channel. But it seems intuitively right to call the elimination of publishers “second degree disintermediation” - replacement of the mechanisms of production, including everything from product development through physical manufacturing and marketing, by the entities now predominating in distribution.
In my view, one of the main problems of reusable identities is that...the “identity provider” has astonishing visibility onto the user’s relationship with the relying parties (e.g. the services who reuse the identity information they provide). Not only does the identity provider know what consumers are visiting what services; it knows the frequency and patterns of those visits.
Let me fabricate an example so I can be more concrete. Suppose we arrive at a point where some retailer decides to advise consumers to use their Facebook credentials to log in to its web site. And let’s suppose the retailer is super successful. With Facebook’s redirection-based single sign-on system, Facebook would be able to compile a complete profile of the retailer’s customers and their log-on patterns. Combine this with the intelligence from “Like” buttons or advertising beacons and Facebook (or equivalent) could actually mine the profiles of users almost as effectively as the retailer itself. This knowledge represents significant leakage of the retailer’s core intellectual property - its relationships with its customers. [emphasis added]
All of this is a recipe for disintermediation of the exact kind being practiced by Amazon, and at some point in the process, I predict it will give rise to cases of spine-tingling that extend much more broadly than to a single industry like publishing... This will, in my view, bring about considerable rethinking of some current paradigms about the self-evident value of unlimited integration into social networks...
SEATTLE — Amazon.com has taught readers that they do not need bookstores. Now it is encouraging writers to cast aside their publishers.
In my view, one of the main problems of reusable identities is that...the “identity provider” has astonishing visibility onto the user’s relationship with the relying parties (e.g. the services who reuse the identity information they provide). Not only does the identity provider know what consumers are visiting what services; it knows the frequency and patterns of those visits.
Let me fabricate an example so I can be more concrete. Suppose we arrive at a point where some retailer decides to advise consumers to use their Facebook credentials to log in to its web site. And let’s suppose the retailer is super successful. With Facebook’s redirection-based single sign-on system, Facebook would be able to compile a complete profile of the retailer’s customers and their log-on patterns. Combine this with the intelligence from “Like” buttons or advertising beacons and Facebook (or equivalent) could actually mine the profiles of users almost as effectively as the retailer itself. This knowledge represents significant leakage of the retailer’s core intellectual property - its relationships with its customers. [emphasis added]
All of this is a recipe for disintermediation of the exact kind being practiced by Amazon, and at some point in the process, I predict it will give rise to cases of spine-tingling that extend much more broadly than to a single industry like publishing... This will, in my view, bring about considerable rethinking of some current paradigms about the self-evident value of unlimited integration into social networks...
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