Tue, 2 May 2006 In this episode of STODID, I interview Jaco Aizenmann. Jaco Aizenman is contributing to the development Virtual Rights, a new set of Human Rights. He serves as a director on the board of XDI.org. He is also the founder and Consortium Development Coordinator of the Free Software Consortium that created the Free Software Act, a new legislation that can protect FLOSS (Free/Libre and Open Source Software) and the CEO of a small internet satellite access provider in Costa Rica. Mr. Aizenman has worked extensively on Information and Communication Technologies for human development. Among others he had worked on the Inter-American Development Bank, the World Bank Development Gateway, Lincos, and Gilat. He also led the universalization of the email and website account in Costa Rica.
In this interview we talk about: 1. How he first became interested in
digital identity, 2. The four human dimensions, 3. The Digital Identity
Metasystem, 4. The Fundamental Human Right of a Digital Identity, 5. How it's seems unlikely that two guys from Central America (me from Guatemala and he from Costa Rica) would appear on a podcast about digital identity. Other show notes: - VP Human Right - Constitutional amendment Subscribe: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.5 License.Direct download: Stodid-JacoAizenman-5-06.mp3 Category: Technical Implications -- posted at: 11:15 AM Comments[0] |


