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Seo Master present to you: Author PhotoBy Amanda Surya, Manager of YouTube and Commerce Developer Relations

When we launched Google Developers Live back in June, our goal was to give you 24/7/365 access to inspiration and training on our developer tools and platforms, extending the unmatched enthusiasm we see every year at Google I/O. We expanded the scope of our programming with GDL Presents: focused, week-long series with varied perspectives from developers on how they're successfully tackling technical and business challenges.

Our series for next week, GDL Presents: Women Techmakers bring you conversations with women tech leaders, activists and creators from diverse backgrounds.

Women Techmakers
will start as a five-episode series airing November 5th-9th daily at 2:30 PM PST (22:30 UTC), highlighting women in the technical space who are fearlessly innovating, honing technical expertise, and testing the boundaries of technology. Join us live in the studio as we chat with the following prominent female tech entrepreneurs:

Full episode schedule
Monday, 11/5 at 2:30 PM PST | 22:30 UTC [Add to calendar]
Hosts: Megan Smith - Vice President, Google [x] | Betsy Masiello - Policy Manager
Guest: Leslie Bradshaw - President, COO and Co-founder, JESS3
Join Leslie, COO and Co-founder of JESS3, in conversation with Megan Smith and Betsy Masiello, as they discuss Leslie’s experience growing a design business from two employees to a transnational operation.

Tuesday, 11/6 at 2:30 PM PST | 22:30 UTC [Add to calendar]
Hosts: Jean Wang - Lead Hardware Engineer for Project Glass
     Vivian Cromwell - Manager, Global Chrome Developer Relations
Guest: Mary Lou Jepsen - CEO and Founder, Pixel Qi
Drawing on Mary Lou’s experience leading the engineering and architectural design of the $100 laptops that inspired the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) organization, hosts Jean Wang and Vivian Cromwell sit down with the 2011 Anita Borg “Woman of Vision” Award for Innovation winner to discuss overcoming technical challenges in hardware.


Wednesday, 11/7 at 2:30 PM PST | 22:30 UTC [Add to calendar]
Hosts: Mary Grove - Head of Global Entrepreneurial Outreach
Stephanie Liu - Senior Program Manager, Developer Relations
Guests: Stephanie Palmeri - Principal with SoftTech VC
Angela Benton - Founder & CEO NewME Accelerator
Stephanie Palmeri of SoftTech VC and Angela Benton of NewMe Accelerator join Mary Grove and Stephanie Liu in the GDL studio to discuss their experiences with diversity in the startups/investment space.


Thursday, 11/8 at 2:30 PM PST | 22:30 UTC [Add to calendar]
Hosts: Claire Hughes Johnson - Vice President, Google Offers
Jessie Jiang - Product Management Lead, Google Cloud Platform
Guest: Diane Greene - Board of Directors, Google
Vice President of Google Offers Claire Hughes Johnson co-hosts with Cloud Platform PM Lead Jessie Jiang in Episode 4 of WTM. They will be exploring former VMWare CEO and current Google board member Diane Greene’s high-level thoughts on cloud computing and the role of women in the tech space.

Bitly and Pixability (Double Feature)

Friday, 11/9 at 2:30 PM PST (Part I) | 22:30 UTC
Hosts: Gretchen Howard - Director of Global Social Solutions
Amanda Surya - Manager, Developer Relations
[Part I] Guest: Bettina Hein - Founder and CEO, Pixability [Add to calendar]
Gretchen Howard and Amanda Surya speak with Pixability Founder & CEO Bettina Hein about her experience building successful technology businesses worldwide, and her commitment to activating women involvement in the tech space.

Friday, 11/9 at 3:15 PM PST (Part II) | 23:15 UTC
Hosts: April Anderson - Industry Director, Retail Sales at Google
Kathryn Hurley - Developer Programs Engineer, Google Compute Engine
[Part II] Guest: Hilary Mason - Chief Scientist, Bitly [Add to calendar]
April Anderson and Kathryn Hurley chat with Bitly Chief Scientist Hilary Mason about the role data plays in making business decisions, the intersection of government, policy, and technology, and her experience in the New York tech community.

You can view these episodes on Google Developers Live, the Google Developers YouTube channel, and on +Google Developers. RSVP to next week’s events by following +Google Developers Live, and add +Google Developers to your circles to submit questions and thoughts. Follow and contribute to the conversation using #WTM.



Amanda Surya is Manager of the YouTube and Commerce Developer Relations team at Google. In her spare time, she likes to blog about time-saving tips and of course watch YouTube videos.

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor
2013, By: Seo Master
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Seo Master present to you: By Eric Sachs, Google Security Team

Yesterday we announced one step we took to help increase adoption of single-sign on across websites on the Internet. For more details, you can watch today's episode of thesocialweb.tv which covers the launch. While we announced that we would initially provide limited access to our OpenID IDP to make sure it was working properly, we were delighted to see that the number of sites that registered to receive access was significantly more than we had expected. So instead of having our engineers spend time manually maintaining that list of registered sites, we are now taking another step further and removing that restriction so any site can use the API.

That registration requirement also led to some confusion because users wanted to be able to use existing websites that accept OpenID 2.0 compliant logins by simply entering "gmail.com" (or in some cases their full E-mail address) into the login boxes on those websites. Normally what would happen after a user typed gmail.com is that the relying party website would look for a special type of file (XRDS) on the gmail.com servers that would check if Gmail run an OpenID identity provider. For yesterday's launch, we specifically chose not to publish that special XRDS file on gmail.com because if we had published the file, users would have received an error at Google if the website they were trying to log into had not registered with us. Now that we have removed the registration requirement, we will work on pushing that XRDS file as quickly as possible. Once the XRDS file is live, end-users should be able to use the service by typing gmail.com in the OpenID field of any login box that supports OpenID 2.0, similar to how Yahoo users can type yahoo.com or their Yahoo E-mail address. (In the meantime, if you feel really geeky, you can type "https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id" into an OpenID 2.0 compliant login box and see the directed identity workflow in action.)

However, as we we noted in the Designing a Login User Interface section of our documentation, we do not place any requirements on the design of a federated login box on a relying party website. There are many approaches used by websites today, and the community is still experimenting with new approaches.

One other question that a lot of people asked yesterday is when a large provider like Google will become a relying party. There is one big problem that stands in the way of doing that, but fortunately it is more of a technology problem than a usability issue. That problem is that rich-client apps (desktop apps and mobile apps) are hard-coded to ask a user for their username and password. As an example, all Google rich-client apps would break if we supported federated login for our consumer users, and in fact they do break for the large number of our enterprise E-mail outsourcing customers who run their own identity provider, and for which Google is a relying party today. This problem with rich-client apps also affects other sites like Plaxo who are already relying parties.

Google is committed to working on this problem. If community members also want to help in this area, please take a look at our research on combining rich-client apps with federated login which was discussed at the recent UX summit and discussed further in a blog post here. A key thing to notice is that this research is about another open source technology called OAuth, and is agnostic to the particular federated login technology used, i.e. SAML or OpenID. It is also agnostic to the type of strong authentication method (if any) that is used to authenticate the user.

To further increase the adoption of federated login, we need standard open-source components on as many platforms as possible to enable those rich-client apps to support OAuth. That includes a lot more platforms then just Windows and Mac. The harder part is mobile devices (Blackberry, Symbian, Windows Mobile, iPhone, and yes even Android), and other Internet connected devices like Tivos, Apple TVs, Playstations, etc. that have rich-client apps that ask users for their passwords to access services like Youtube, Google photos, etc. If the community works together to build these components, they will be useful not only to Google, but also to any other relying parties that have rich-client apps or that expose APIs, and it will also help enterprise SaaS vendors like Salesforce.

If you want to help further these efforts, join the OpenID and OAuth mailing lists and tell people which platform you are targeting in case others want to help. For example, Mike Malone from Pownce did some work a few months ago to use OAuth on an iPhone and described how he got it working. And just yesterday another member of the open source community, Sean Sullivan, built a working OAuth enabled rich-client app for Android and posted the open source code.2013, By: Seo Master
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