Blog from February, 2014

Internet2 Announces Leadership for Trust and Identity in Education and Research Initiative

New members join InCommon Steering, which will expand its role

Emeryville, Calif. – February 7, 2014 – Internet2 today announced the appointment of several leaders in higher education information technology to the InCommon Steering Committee, which moving forward will serve as the core of the newly expanded Trust and Identity in Education and Research program advisory group. Additionally new members have been appointed to serve on the technical InCommon Assurance Advisory Committee (AAC). In addition to the new members, both committees have new leadership.

The Trust and Identity in Education and Research program advisory group builds on the long-standing work of the InCommon Steering Committee. The expanded group will continue to oversee the business and policy affairs of InCommon trust services, the national U.S. research and education federation, as well as provide guidance for all of Internet2’s broad investments in identity and trust initiatives.

“Internet2 will rely on community leadership from the Trust and Identity in Education and Research program advisory group to provide vision and direction for all of our trust and identity initiatives and programs,” said Shel Waggener, Senior Vice President at Internet2. “The impact of the growing scope of these services is substantial and I’m very appreciative of this group’s commitment, and particularly for the leadership provided over the last three years of the InCommon Steering Committee by University of Maryland Baltimore County CIO Jack Suess.”

Klara Jelinkova, Senior Associate Vice President and Chief Information Technology Officer at the University of Chicago, is the new chair. Appointed to three-year terms are:

  • Dennis Cromwell, Associate Vice President for Enterprise Infrastructure, Indiana University
  • Susan Kelley, Chief Technology Officer, Yale University
  • David Vernon, Associate Chief Information Officer and Director of Information Technology Services, Cornell University
  • Melissa Woo, Vice Provost for Information Services and Chief Information Officer, University of Oregon
  • Bill Yock, Director of Enterprise Information Services, University of Washington
  • Steve Zoppi, Associate Vice President Systems Integration and Architecture, Internet2

Continuing participants include:

  • Klara Jelinkova, Senior Associate Vice President and Chief Information Technology Officer, University of Chicago,
  • Jack Suess, Vice President for Information Technology, University of Maryland Baltimore County
  • Joel Cooper, Chief Information Technology Officer, Swarthmore College
  • Mark Crase, Interim Assistant Vice Chancellor and Chief Information Officer, California State University System
  • Michael Gettes, Assistant Director - Identity Services, Carnegie Mellon University,
  • Chris Holmes, Associate General Counsel, Baylor University,
  • John O'Keefe, Vice President and Chief Information Officer, Lafayette College.

“I’m pleased to welcome such talented and dedicated colleagues to the expanded Trust and Identity group, building on the work of InCommon Steering,” Jelinkova said. “I would also like to thank Ardoth Hassler from Georgetown, Craig Stewart from Indiana, and George Strawn from the federal government for their service the past three years. We will miss their leadership and depth of knowledge.”

Taking the helm of the InCommon Assurance Advisory Committee is Steve Devoti (University of Wisconsin-Madison). He succeeds Mary Dunker (Virginia Tech), the founding chair of the AAC, which guides InCommon’s Assurance Program. New AAC members include Warren Anderson (LIGO), David Crotts (Virginia Tech), and Chris Spadanuda (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee), with Jacob Farmer (Indiana University) reappointed. Continuing on the AAC are Doug Falk (National Student Clearinghouse), Trisha Craig (Duke University), Chris Holmes (Baylor University), and Debbie Bucci (federal government).

“Over the past two years, the AAC has helped launch our identity assurance program,” Jelinkova said. “Mary Dunker played a huge role in its success, including leading Virginia Tech to become the first university certified at the Silver level. We cannot thank her enough. I would also like to thank Scott Koranda (LIGO) and Steve Kurncz (Michigan State University), who are also departing, but played key roles in the formation of the assurance program.”

The Assurance Advisory Committee provides oversight of the InCommon Identity Assurance Program, reviews applications for certification and advises the Trust and Identity in Education and Research program advisory group.

For more information about the Trust and Identity in Education and Research program advisory group and the Assurance Advisory Committee, see http://www.internet2.edu/products-services/trust-identity-middleware/

About Internet2®
Internet2® is a member-owned advanced technology community founded by the nation's leading higher education institutions in 1996. Internet2 provides a collaborative environment for U.S. research and education organizations to solve technology challenges, and to develop innovative solutions in support of their educational, research, and community service missions.

Internet2® also operates the nation’s largest and fastest, coast-to-coast research and education network, and serves more than 90,000 community anchor institutions, including more than 245 U.S. universities, 70 government agencies, 38 regional and state education networks, 60 leading corporations working with our community and more than 100 national research and education networking partners representing more than 50 countries. Internet2 offices are located in Ann Arbor, Mich.; Emeryville, Calif.; Washington, D.C; and West Hartford, CT. For more information, visit www.internet2.edu or follow @Internet2 on Twitter.

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Harvey Mudd College Becomes 600th Participant In Internet2’s InCommon Community

Cloud, Certificates, Trust and Identity All Factors in Decision

Emeryville, CA---Feb. 3, 2014 – Internet2 is proud to announce its 600th InCommon participant, Harvey Mudd College located in Claremont, California. InCommon, the trust services provider for U.S. education and research, now includes 411 higher education institutions, 30 government and non-profit research centers and agencies, and 159 corporate and non-profit partners.

“Harvey Mudd College is delighted to become the 600th participant of InCommon,” said Joseph Vaughan, chief information officer and vice-president for computing and information services at the college. “Through the Claremont Consortium we have long been members of Internet2 and have wanted to participate in the benefits of InCommon for some time. Internet2’s InCommon leaders are doing so much in the areas of networking and cloud computing that are or will be beneficial to a small college like Harvey Mudd. We look forward to making use of the InCommon Certificate Service, for instance, as well as the InCommon Federation.”

More and more, the research and education community is turning to outsourced or cloud services, from learning management systems to support for the vast array of business functions. Through the federation, InCommon provides secure and privacy-preserving institution-based single sign-on convenience for 7.5 million individuals at more than 330 research and higher education organizations.

“This year marks the 10th anniversary – and the continued significant growth – of Internet2’s InCommon, the community-built and community-led approach to access and identity management,” said Shel Waggener, senior vice president of Internet2. “I invite all of the research and education community, and the commercial partners who serve them, to utilize InCommon and enjoy this simpler, scalable approach to collaboration and partnerships.”

Internet2 operates:

  • The InCommon Federation, an identity and access management federation, currently with 434 organizations participating.
  • The InCommon Certificate Service, offering unlimited certificates for all domains owned by a college or university, currently with 274 subscribers
  • The InCommon Assurance Program, providing U.S. government-approved trust in identities for access to higher-value services.
  • The InCommon Multifactor Program, offering multifactor authentication services such as Duo Security phone-based systems and SafeNet smartcards and USB format PKI hard tokens.

About Internet2’s InCommon
InCommon®, operated by Internet2®, serves the US education and research communities, supporting a common framework of trust services, including the US identity management trust federation for research and education, a community-driven Certificate Service, an Assurance Program providing higher levels of trust, and a multifactor authentication program. InCommon has more than 600 participants, including higher education institutions and research organizations, and their sponsored partners. For more information on InCommon and a full list of participants, see www.incommon.org.

About Internet2®

Internet2® is a member-owned advanced technology community founded by the nation's leading higher education institutions in 1996. Internet2 provides a collaborative environment for U.S. research and education organizations to solve technology challenges, and to develop innovative solutions in support of their educational, research, and community service missions.

Internet2® also operates the nation’s largest and fastest, coast-to-coast research and education network, and serves more than 90,000 community anchor institutions, including more than 245 U.S. universities, 70 government agencies, 38 regional and state education networks, 60 leading corporations working with our community and more than 100 national research and education networking partners representing more than 50 countries. Internet2 offices are located in Ann Arbor, Mich.; Emeryville, Calif.; Washington, D.C; and West Hartford, CT. For more information, visit www.internet2.edu or follow @Internet2 on Twitter.

Contact: Dean Woodbeck
woodbeck@internet2.edu
(906) 523-9620