4. Digital ID Fixed Access Identity theft Security Digital Self Mutable Performance Reputation Control D IMENSIONS OF D IGITAL I DENTITY
5. Self Dialectic Identity Person Internal External Identification Other Collective I DENTITY F RAMEWORK Similarity Difference
6. … a technologically mediated extension of the self formed from any available electronic data that references ‘you’
7. Rather than ask what is digital identity – perhaps it is better to observe how identities are performed in digital spaces?
8. digital Identity spaces my personal space my professional space my social life my lifestyle my ego search my shared media
9. Strand 1 – what successful practices do individuals already employ when creating, developing and managing their digital identity? Strand 2 – what kinds of tools would be valuable to help support individuals in the productive use of their digital identity? Approach: share narratives of successful practice using participatory pattern workshops to uncover DI design patterns Approach: design usability extensions to the Euro pass CV plug-in tool to manage identity resources
10. Rhizome Strand 1 - The Problem What kind of knowledge can we share? How do we elicit it? In what ways do we capture and transfer it?
11. Design patterns and pattern languages Other Areas Many authors and titles. Pedagogy, Social Action, HCI, Virtual Worlds, Learning, Collaboration, Assessment, Web design, Usability, Project Management 2009 Gang of Four Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable. Object Orientated Software. Object Orientated Software Design 1995 Christopher Alexander The Timeless Way of Building. A Pattern Language: Towns , Buildings, Construction. Architecture 1977
12. Capture and re-use expert design knowledge Establish common terminology and language Provide the necessary level of abstraction for solving novel problems Why design patterns?
16. Case-story workshop Engender collaborative reflection among practitioners by a structured process of sharing narratives of successful practice (STARR) Three Hats Table-top Concept Mapping
18. Pattern Mining workshop Identify commonalities across case-stories and abstract transferable design knowledge in a semi-structured form Paper 2.0 Force Mapping
22. Digital Identity Panic Facet Me Leaving Trails Others First Permissioned Aggregation Purposeful Delay Space for Lurking What is My Name Digital Identity Pattern Collection at http://purl.org/planet/Main/ Personal Professional Openness Control
27. Alexander Pattern #127 - Intimacy Gradient: Conflict: Unless the spaces in a building are arranged in a sequence which corresponds to their degrees of privateness, the visits made by strangers, friends, guests, clients, family, will always be a little awkward. Resolution: Lay out the spaces of a building so that they create a sequence which begins with the entrance and the most public parts of the building, then leads into the slightly more private areas, and finally to the most private domains.
28. 1. Awareness – ego search, context, history 2. Trusted source – professional profile, authoritative 3. Aggregation – triangulation, rich picture 4. Compartmentalisation – permissions, separate identity spaces F OUR R ECURRING T HEMES within D IGITAL I DENTITY P ATTERNS
32. Acknowledgements: The Pattern Language Network (Planet) project was a collaboration between Leeds Metropolitan University, Coventry University, Glasgow Caledonian University, King’s College London and London Knowledge Lab. It was funded by JISC under the Users and Innovation Programme. For more information see http://patternlanguagenetwork.org Learning Patterns was a Jointly Executed Integrating Research Project of the Kaleidoscope Network of Excellence . It was co-directed by Dave Pratt, from Warwick university, and Niall Winters from the London Knowledge Lab. Additional partners were: The Freudenthal Institute, the Educational Technology Lab, Dept of Education, University of Athens, Istituto per le Tecnologie Didattiche, Centre for Research in IT in Education (CRITE), Trinity College Dublin and the Faculty of Education at the IT University of Göteborg. For further work on the PPW project please also see Yishay Mor and Niall Winters http://www.slideshare.net/yish Funded by Eduserv http://www.rhizomeproject.org
Notas do Editor
Our digital identity is not merely an extension of our non-digital identity. It is an integral part. It is another performance space. In fact it provides multiple spaces for performing our identities.