The Rhizome awareness report entitled ‘Digital Identity Matters’ highlights the issues we face when dealing with our online identities. It outlines the design pattern approach that has been used to help define a set of problems and their solutions that all relate to our understanding and use of a digital identity. The material is released as an open access resource and is aimed at contributing to a deeper understanding of digital identity and the impact it can have on the individual and those around them. It will be of relevance to anyone who uses the Internet to disclose personal information about themselves – be it purposefully through the use of social media tools or as a result of work-based professional activities.

Citation: Warburton, S. (ed.) 2010.  Digital Identity Matters. London: King’s College London


In collaboration with Marc Van Coillie, from The European Institute for eLearning, the Rhizome project has developed The application profile of Europass CV based on HR-XML SEP (Staff Exchange Protocol) Candidate specifications and the extensions for Europass/Europortfolio CV application profile.

  • The application profile of Europass CV based on HR-XML SEP Candidate specifications describes a XML binding of the Europass CV as defined at the European level. This work can be seen as a proposal for an e-portfolio binding of the Europass CV from CEDEFOP using HR-XML specifications. This application profile would allow creation of Europass CV XML based documents in order to allow import/export of simple XML profile (example: aggregation of CV from personal eportfolios to a HR system).

  • The extensions for Europass/Europortfolio CV application profile, as the name indicates, describes several possible extensions for the HR-XML Europortfolio/Europass CV profile in order to better fit with ePortfolio interoperability requirements, such as extension elements for higher education, for language or competency based portfolio, etc.

This application profile allows the development and update of Europass CV, Resumes and ePortfolios web applications using the Europass CV data model and the HR-XML SEP candidate specifications.

The concrete benefits of using this application profile are the following:

  • Conformance with both European Europass v2 CV data model and last HR-XML specifications;
  • Ease of integration with HR systems while using common open and extensible specifications;
  • Use of external references and attachments for annexes to complete the CV structure;
  • Integration with other Europass and European initiatives, like the Europass Diploma and the Certificate supplement, the European Qualification Framework;
  • Enable the capability to use external competency frameworks;
  • Addition of extra elements to extend CV semantics in an ePortfolio approach (i.e. additional elements such as publications, speaking event history, referees, affiliations, experiences, etc.);
  • Addition of a relationship layer to increase semantic dialogue between parts of CV/ePortfolio (i.e. experiences with competency, education background and Europass Diploma Supplement);
  • Ability to test conformance while using a common interoperability framework;
  • Cross interoperability between Europass CV and HR-XML schemas with the related transformation stylesheets;
  • Interoperability with other CV/ePortfolio standards (IMS ePortfolio, Leap2a, LinkedIn hResume) and production of Europass CV documents (PDF, ODT, MS Office Doc) while supporting an online transformation web service.

The documents are downloadable here and also from the EifEL website. They are available under Creative Commons BY-NC-SA.


Please, no more photos... by Paula FJ

Please no more photos…, by Paula FJ

Summary

This pattern highlights the tension between personal online identity authoring and the responsibility we have towards others when their identity is enmeshed with ours. Specifically, how parents and guardians mitigate the risks associated with publishing online images of their children and the resulting contribution they make to a child’s digital identity.

Authors*

Margarita Pérez García, Steven Warburton, Phil Archer, Josie Fraser, Sally Griffin, Jim Hensman, Mark Kramer, Finbar Mulholland, Leon Cych, Jonathan Poole, Mira Vogel,  Yishay Mor.

*Please ensure that the full development history remains with this pattern so that all authors are acknowledged.

Problem

Photographs have an important place in presenting, reflecting and understanding our identities, and in preserving our memories. The ease of capturing digital images combined with the proliferation of social sites and services for publishing them online make it is simple to share such content publicly on the Internet.

Parents and guardians who create an online identity that includes images and text about their children inevitably contribute to their children’s online presence. Parents and guardians can unknowingly participate in the construction of the digital identity of dependents who subsequently have little control over how they are presented or who they are presented to.

Whatever the reasons or justifications for the online publication of these images, the problem remains. An online picture of a child that is posted on the Internet contributes and/or interferes with that child’s online identity before they understand the implications and are able to build and manage their own digital identity. At worst these images can present a series of risks that need to be mitigated:

  • Potential for abuse – this can be via cutting and pasting images, editing images or changing the context within which an image is viewed.
  • Access to personal information – images can be used within flaming, stalking and cyber-bullying type behaviours.
  • Identity theft – too much personal information can accidentally be made visible and lead to identities being stolen.
  • Attraction of unsolicited communication – this could be to a parent or child represented in a given image via the online service in which the image resides, but this could also translate into tracing a person in the real-world if geotags (geographical identification metadata usually consisting of latitude and longitude coordinates) have been used.
  • Misinterpretation – information may be inappropriately represented, errors amplified and false conclusions drawn, for example when images are taken out of their original context and aggregated into pornographic collections.
  • Interference – images that persist over time have the potential to affect their adult life for good or ill. The created identity can interfere with the identity the children create for themselves in the future that will evolve over time as they play with their identity.
  • Potential embarrassment of children in the short, medium and long term.

Forces

Parents and guardians have different reasons to publish photos of their children. They do not need any authorisation or a third person’s consent to do so – they are legally responsible and by default this includes the responsibility for their digital identity. The reasons for publishing images can be varied:

  • Sharing our family life history with friends and family around the world. Often this includes non-digitally literate members who will not create an account on a photo-sharing service to access private photos and therefore images are left visible in the public domain;
  • Sharing and reflecting on our lifestyle and identity as we navigate through life with children;
  • For common good or social interest, for example by creating a portfolio of a rare health condition to solicit information and help.

Whatever the reasons that parents and guardians have, the online publication of photographs uncovers a number of tensions:

  • The act of self-conscious identity development of the adult’s digital identity versus the contribution this makes to a minor’s digital identity, including the new perceptions and the impact of a public photo on the audience and the subject of the photo itself;
  • Assuming full authority and control over a minor’s digital identity versus the lack of consent and informed judgement about that impact on the child’s identity;
  • The persistent nature of online images that fix identity versus the dynamic and changing nature of a child’s identity and the freedom of identity play;
  • Conflict between the parents and guardian’s personal benefit in building digital identities of familyhood and the potential dangers that are a child might become exposed to in this process;

These forces stress the need for negotiation and vigilance around any piece of visual information on the Internet that relates to a minor.

Context

Theses issues are relevant to all parents and guardians who are legally responsible for the children within their care. More broadly, they also resonate with any situation where someone manages their own or another’s online identity and therefore have an ethical responsibility to consider issues such as the online safety of those they portray. Although this pattern is drawn from case-stories that focus on the practice of putting images of children online, it is
applicable to many situations where the sharing of digital content impacts on others, with a particular poignancy to vulnerable populations.

When we refer to publishing images online we do mean the activity of uploading images that include parents with their children or depict children alone, into an online portfolio (e.g. blog, social network sites like Facebook, or a photo-sharing service such as Flickr or Picassa) where the content of these sites is potentially open to public view or can be accessed by Internet search engines or aggregation tools.

Solution

The children’s views and integrity must be respected. Put them first! Accept that managing online identities is an ongoing task that requires effort and vigilance.

Concrete solutions:

  • When choosing a service be aware of what kind of functionality the online photo management and sharing application offers. It is of utmost importance to choose a service that offers good privacy protection such as granular control over who can view your images.
  • In Social Network Services (e.g. Flickr) use the privacy settings and the safety controls that are provided. Do not assume that privacy is the primary goal of any service provider.
  • Limit the number of public photos in SNSs and make sure you set passwords or other security features to access these pictures. If the service doesn’t offer safety controls and granular access, then consider not using the service.
  • Monitor any changes that the service provider may make to privacy controls in the future and review the implications in terms of access to your stored content.
  • Change access permissions from public view to private contacts as necessary and do not forget to manage your network boundaries. Review your list of contacts and ask your self: ‘Who are my friends?’.
  • Delete or hide photos that are vulnerable to dangers such as discrediting or suspicion.
  • Add appropriate reproduction rights to your images e.g. All rights reserved or Creative Commons (http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/)
  • Prevent automated association in other peopls’s ‘favourite’ collections and galleries by monitoring activity, blocking favourites and altering default authorisation settings that allow your photos to be added to third person galleries.
  • Use the service providers “report abuse” functionality to report any suspicious or unwanted activity from external parties or other site users.
  • Digitally alter a photo to obscure identification of children that are included in photos with adults, for example by blurring facial features.
  • Consult the child who is in the picture and check that they are happy to see it online.
  • Monitor and control tagging of your photos by preventing automated and/or human generated tags being added that could be used to name people represented in the photos.
  • Use geotagging with caution. If you are not sure what it does then leave it alone!
  • Hide the photos of your children from public search engines.
  • Avoid giving out too much information in photo titles, descriptions and comments.

Support

This pattern is supported by two case-stories:

These two case-stories are completed with references to five others textual narratives:

Though different, these case-stories complement each other by providing insights from differing perspectives about the use of social media. In particular the use of the online photo management and sharing application Flickr to publish images of family life, including those of children alone or with their parents. The case stories come with three visual narratives depicting (i) a family image taken out of context by being added to a child pornography collection (ii) a parent’s action statement against the open publishing of images of children (iii) and a photo from an art project ‘The Privacy of Our Kids in Flickr’ uses images of children deliberately published by parents under the Creative Commons licence By-SA-NC.

Conclusions

This pattern can be generalised to any situation where we produce content that references others and make it publicly visible, for example at a conference or workshop where we may take pictures of participants and outputs and put them up on Flickr. Other related patterns may arise from the following situations:

  • Publishing compromising personal online images may be against social norms, cultural codes or have a negative impact on professional life
  • Publishing online pictures of minors such as pupils and students
  • The ethical considerations we need to address when we knowingly create content that will contribute to a third person’s online image

For this pattern two questions remain unanswered:

  • Ethically, is it up to parents to create an ID for their children?
  • At what point can a child be sensibly consulted for consent on the publication of an online picture depicting them alone or with an adult? Is there particular moment at which children should be engaged with these decisions?

Finally, what can we expect in the future. Perhaps one of the solutions we will see is the ability to add digital rights management (DRM) to an image that could allow for legacy photos to have their rights reassigned at a later date so that others can delete or manage them.

References

Licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence: Attribution, Non-Commercial, No Derivatives.

Development history

The production of this pattern involved 12 persons at different levels (authoring, review and shepherding) during 12 months, from January to December 2009.

The authors of the present version should be cited in the following order: Margarita Pérez García (primary author, led and was involved in the production of the pattern from the beginning to the end, throughout 3 workshops plus continuous personal research), Steven Warburton (shepherded the working groups during the development, and from the second workshop, contributed to its continuous improvement),  Phil Archer, Josie Fraser, Sally Griffin, Jim Hensman, Mark Kramer, Finbar Mulholland (authors in alphabetic order who participated in the first workshop where the pattern idea emerged); Leon Cych, Jonathan Poole, Mira Vogel, (authors in alphabetic order who participated in the second workshop where the pattern was improved),  Yishay Mor (shepherd during the 3 workshops).

The first version of this pattern was developed during the 1st Eduserv Digital Identities workshop in January 2009 organised by the Rhizome project (http://www.rhizomeproject.org) and is the product of a working group that included: Phil Archer, Josie Fraser, Sally Griffin, Jim Hensman, Mark Kramer, Finbar Mulholland, and Margarita Pérez García. For more information see: http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2009/06/22/case-story-workshop/

The second version of this pattern was developed during the 2nd Eduserv Digital Identities workshop in March 2009 and is the product of a working group that included: Leon Cych, Jonathan Poole, Mira Vogel and Margarita Pérez García. For more information see: http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2009/08/05/scenarios-patterns-workshop/

The complexity of this pattern demanded a number of revisions. It was clear that two or possibly more patterns sat within the same problem space: online publication of images of our children; publishing of photos of pupils and students; potential contributions to a third person’s online identity; and publishing personal images that are vulnerable to discrediting or suspicion. The final version of this pattern therefore focuses solely on the online publication of images
of children by parents and guardians. It was prepared by Margarita Pérez García and presented to the 3rd Eduserv Digital Identities ‘Writers workshop’ and has been updated by Margarita Pérez García and Steven Warburton after shepherding by Jim Hensman, Yishay Mor, Andy Powell, Megan Smith, and Steven Warburton. For more information see: http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2009/12/30/writers-workshop/

Citation

  • MLA: Pérez García, Margarita, et al. “Putting Children First.” The Rhizome Project. N.p., 01 01 2010. Web. 11 Jun 2010. <http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2010/01/01/puttingchildrenfirst/>.
  • APA: Pérez García, M., Warburton, S., Archer, P., Fraser, J., Griffin, S., Hesman, J. et al. (2010, January 01). Putting children first. Retrieved from http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2010/01/01/puttingchildrenfirst/
  • CHICAGO (Documentation 1): Pérez García, Margarita and others. “Putting Children First.” January 1st, 2010.http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2010/01/01/puttingchildrenfirst/ (accessed 11 June, 2010).
  • CHICAGO (Documentation 2): Pérez García, Margarita, Steven Warburton, Phil Archer, Josie Fraser, Sally Griffin, Jim Hensman, Mark Kramer, Finbar Mulholland, Leon Cych, Jonathan Poole, Mira Vogel and Yishay Mor. “Putting Children First.” January 1st, 2010.http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2010/01/01/puttingchildrenfirst/ (accessed 11 June, 2010).
  • ASA: Pérez García, Margarita, Steven Warburton, Phil Archer, Josie Fraser, Sally Griffin, Jim Hensman, Mark Kramer, Finbar Mulholland, Leon Cych, Jonathan Poole, Mira Vogel and Yishay Mor. “Putting Children First.” January 1st, 2010.http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2010/01/01/puttingchildrenfirst/ (accessed 11 June, 2010).
  • TURABIAN: Pérez García, Margarita, Steven Warburton, Phil Archer, Josie Fraser, Sally Griffin, Jim Hensman, Mark Kramer, Finbar Mulholland, Leon Cych, Jonathan Poole, Mira Vogel and Yishay Mor. “Putting Children First.” The Rhizome Project. Available from http://digitaldisruptions.org/rhizome/2010/01/01/puttingchildrenfirst/. Internet; accessed 11 June 2010.

For more information on citing multiple authors see: Articles with More than Three Authors

Further information

Design pattern methodology and participatory pattern workshops for digital identity see the Rhizome Project website at http://www.rhizomeproject.org
See also the Pattern Language Network database at http://purl.org/planet/Main/

Contacts (and for comments and suggestions)

  • Margarita Pérez García, MENON Network EIGG, BE: contact(@)margaperez.com or margarita.perez(@)menon.org
  • Steven Warburton, King’s College London, UK: steven.warburton(@)kcl.ac.uk

This was the final workshop in the design patterns for digital identity series and in some ways the most focused and intense. Having spent two workshops in a melee of group-based activities on our case-stories, patterns and scenarios we slowed things down somewhat to concentrate on developing four of the digital identity patterns. This workshop was all about writing – finessing and interrogating the form, structure and content of the patterns – until they are ready for public release.

Patterns are not easy to write, especially if we consider that we might aim to achieve what Alexander (1979) termed ‘quality without a name’ (see below for the full-quote*). The day was not only a chance for a small group to sit down and discuss the complexity of pattern writing but it was also purposeful with defined outcomes. As such it followed a particular format based on the pattern writing workshop used at the annual Europlop conference that draws on the work of Gabriel (2002) and others. What is particular about a pattern writing workshop is that the author, though present, sits outside the group (or ‘shepherds’), not within it, while their work is reviewed. S/he becomes a fly on the wall – listening to the group discuss, comment and suggest changes, yet s/he is forbidden from intervening or responding.

Step 1 – Papers are prepared in advance of the workshop

The patterns are worked on and top and tailed with an introduction and conclusions to give the pattern the feel of an academic paper (though the core remains the problem, solution and context).

Each section is completed as far as is possible and where unfinished marked as TBC (to be completed).

Our papers were circulated to the workshop participants who were directed to read through each of the patterns looking for strengths and weaknesses. The four patterns that were submitted to this workshop were:

Space for Lurking – Steven Warburton
Identity Placemaking – Megan Smith
Others First – Margarita Perez Garcia
Permissioned Aggregation – Andy Powell

Step2 – Running the workshop

After the welcome and introductions amongst the group members a specific set of stages were used during the review process and respected for each of the authors:

1. The first paper is introduced by the chair;
2. The author is then invited to read a paragraph from their paper (to hear the author’s voice);
3. The author is asked to move outside the circle and only listen to the group discussion;
4. The chair asks for comments on the strengths of the paper, moving around each group member in turn;
5. This is repeated for the weaknesses in the paper – but importantly there should be constructive suggestions to solving any highlighted problems;
6. There is then a final round of commentary and encouragement;
7. The author is now invited back into the circle and may ask for clarifications, if needed, on what has been said by a group member;
8. To close the session, the group thanks the author with a round of applause;
9. The group then moves to the next paper and repeats the process until all the papers have benefited from this group shepherding process.

Note: If you do happen to have a lot of papers then timing needs to be strict and due to the level of discussion I cannot imagine reviewing more that eight to ten papers in a single day.

Step 3 – Updating patterns after the workshop

Authors are asked to update their patterns, taking as much or as little of the advice and suggestions as they feel is needed to improve their work. For our workshop we asked the four authors to resubmit their work back to the group.

So how well did this ritual-like format work? This was the first time any of the workshop participants (myself included) had been involved in a writers workshop and I can say it was enlightening for all. As both an author and a commentator/shepherd I experienced both sides of the process. The format works on the principle of a trusted circle and introductions were important even though we already knew each other to some degree – and although the term shepherd feels slightly strange at first it does convey the way that one approaches reviewing others work. The idea is to help the author produce a better piece of work – in this case a design pattern. This is not about ego or competition, or about rubbishing other people’s efforts. It is about guiding and in that guidance being positive and encouraging even when highlighting weaknesses. If you spot a problem then what can you offer as a shepherd to help improve or solve it. It might sound disconcerting to have the author present while the group review takes place and here space is an important consideration – it needs to be comfortable and provide a natural area for the pattern author to sit outside the circle. In this way the discussion between the group can flow freely without interruption or distraction.

Listening to my own work being reviewed was strangely relaxing – being there but not there. Sitting away from the group, with no eye contact or direct presence forces one to simply listen – a rare opportunity. There is no point in feeling defensive – how can you when you have no voice? So I was left to concentrate on writing down and capturing as much of the help, insight and advice as possible … and there was plenty of it, reflected in the copious notes I gathered on the day. What you receive is a sense of what readers will understand in the work you have written. If you have not explained something well enough then you can hear it the comments – and have a chance to correct it.

Since the workshop all of the patterns have been amended and resubmitted to the group. These four patterns will now go towards publication, most likely in a new edited collection on Digital Identity and Social Media.

Finally, just to add thanks to all of those who put the effort to write the patterns up in advance and thanks to all those present on the day for their valuable comments and input, including Yishay Mor our excellent chair.

References:
Alexander, C. (1979). The Timeless Way of Building. Oxford University Press, UK.

Gabriel, R. P. (2002), Writer’s Workshops and the Work of Making Things, Addison-Wesley Longman Publishing Co., Inc. Boston, MA, USA.

*This oneness, or the lack of it, is the fundamental quality for anything. Whether it is in a poem, or a man, or a building full of people, or in a forest, or a city, everything that matters stems from it. It embodies everything. Yet still this quality cannot be named. (Alexander 1979, p28)


Slides from my presentation to the Centre for Information Management group at the University of Bath on 21st October 2009. Many thanks to Keith Dixon and Niki Panteli and for the invitation to speak.

The presentation sums up the work to this date on the use of the participatory pattern methodology to develop design patterns in the area of digital identity and introduces a basic framework for thinking about the negotiation of identity in online settings. I came away with one question from the audience  – “How does your digital identity effect your real-world interactions and behaviours?” – that highlighted the importance of acknowledging that authoring the self in online spaces is a two way process and not merely a projection or extension of identity but integral.


Growing up in public

CC Paul Kelly

'No photos please' by Paul Kelly

For this year’s Educa Online Berlin conference we [Marga and Steve] were asked to comment on one of the issues that we identified for the Digital Identity symposium that we called ‘Growing up Public’.

Our responses are repeated here:

Q. What impact do you  expect on young people’s lives from  ‘growing up in public’?

A. When we [Rhizome project] use the phrase ‘growing up in public’ we refer to the increased visibility that many young people have and will continue to experience throughout their lifetime engagement with social media. The Internet is now a space dominated by the connections between individuals and their ability to [re]use and create rich content – something that now lies within everyone’s grasp, not just that of the technically and technologically privileged. This coupled with the diversification of devices we [people] use to access Internet within a pervasive always connected environment mean that we now have a multiplicity of what Holland (1998) might call ‘spaces of authoring’ or self-fashioning.

One of the main impacts that we are interested in, that results from this increased level of life exposure via the Internet, is the ongoing work that is required in the construction of digital identities. How do young people manage and maintain coherent and purposeful digital identities when public and private boundaries are often blurred and the tools for controlling digital histories are lacking. Real issues emerge from the complexities of this process within for example the world of job seeking and active engagement in online communities of practice.

Q. How can we mitigate the risks? Do we need more rules, limitations or more control?

A. Among the solutions to help citizens to manage their digital identities, there are three that interest us as educators, parents and citizens. The first is awareness raising to increase young people’s digital identity literacy. By this I mean the ability of individuals to manage their digital identity in an efficient manner in accordance with their changing life goals. I am particularly interested in the responsibility and accountability parents and guardians have towards the digital identity of their children, especially when they have not started to craft their own digital identity spaces. Here, specific actions to support parents and children in acquiring digital identity literacies are lacking. Secondly, in the area of technology, we need to see improvements in the level of granularity and access control to user generated content. Individuals need to be empowered to decide what they share, with whom and for how long this is required. The standard three level sharing policy – with all, with my friends and with my family – is not sufficient. Finally, we need to be able to assert our right to control user-generated content about ourselves. By developing the tools and processes to discover and delete undesired persistent content we should all have the ability to remove those digital traces that might impact negatively our lives.

Q. Should parents be responsible for their children activities on the web?

A. Parents should be responsible for their children’s education in matters related to digital identity literacy, helping them to gain awareness about the extent of their digital personas and support them in the crafting of their digital selves – for example by discussing with them at the relevant age (each has different needs) about: the extent of their digital identity, who contributes to it, the reach of their activities within the different social networks and communities they participate in, the persistence of their digital traces and their short, medium, long term impact, the creation of alternative digital selves, how to track unwanted information about themselves, digital identity etiquette, and awareness about cyber security and identity threats.

Q. Is there any recommendation from your side, on how to handle the own presence in online communities or on websites?

A. This is an area that the Rhizome project (http://www.rhizomeproject.org) is currently investigating using a particular methodology based on identifying successful practices through the production of a set of design patterns for digital identity. This is an approach that seeks to empower individuals to design their own solutions to the problems they encounter when constructing and managing their digital identity, be it within online communities or operating in a professional work-based setting. In terms of recommendations then these will vary according to the age and the purpose of the subject. For us, a useful framework to understand digital identity management could be ordered around the following processes: increase your awareness of your digital self, craft a home for your online presence, claim the trusted sources relating to your digital persona, aggregate sources and traces of your digital selves for specific purposes such job-seeking, compartimentalise and protect the digital selves you don’t want to be exposed to all via the Internet, for example maintaining the professional-personal divide.

Margarita Perez-Garcia and Steven Warburton


Curriculum vitae

Among the functionalities of the CV builder plugin for WordPress, there is the ability to record a candidate’s personal data using the HR-XML structure, and then transform it into several formats including hResume and Europass CV. For this reason we have started the process of updating the Application Profile (AP) of the Europass CV based on the ‘HR-XML SEP Candidate Specifications 3.0. This work will be carried out in cooperation with Marc Van Coillie from the European Institute of eLearning, France. Marc is an expert in the interoperability and integration of IT systems for eLearning, HR, KM and digital identity (HR-XML, IMS Global, Liberty Alliance, OpenID, Kantara, Micro-Format, OpenSocial, RDFa). Marc has also developed the CV transcoding web service: http://cvt.eife-l.org/index.php?language=en and the LinkedIN public profile to Europass CV converter: http://www.europortfolio.org/linkedin2europass

The Europass Application Profile is not a new development. It is the output of three years of continuous efforts from EIfEL, but also from the HR-XML Europass working group of the HR-XML consortium and the Liberty Alliance HR-EDU Special Interest Group. Many people have contributed to the AP since its first version in 2006:

The funding from Eduserv under the Rhizome project will now allow us to update the existing Application Profile to the 3.0 release of the HR-XML standards. (See Candidate Profile type specifications).

This application profile makes it possible to develop Europass CV builders that are compliant with both CEDEFOP’s Europass XML and HR-XML Candidate specifications. What is exciting about this work is that it also allows the transformation of CV personal data for cross interoperability with the other major CV related specifications and standards, for example:

  • HR-XML profiles – iProfile UK and GermanCV

  • IMS ePortfolio – Dutch ePortfolio

  • Leap2a, hResume – LinkedIn

Finally, it can also be used within the Liberty Alliance Web Service Framework to provide a shared privacy layer.


The European Conference on Educational Research was held in Vienna this year and bought together over 2000  people and 27 networks to share their work. As part of the programme we ran a small research workshop (under the VETnet strand) with the aim of exploring key themes and issues surrounding digital identities that are of relevance to practitioners working in education. The slides below provide a brief overview of the session:

There was a real mix of participants from across Europe (and beyond), including Italy, Finland, Greece, UK, Australia, and Hungary. This richness in nationalities immediately foregrounded what is an often overlooked dimension in discussions around digital identity – namely the impact of cultural difference. Different cultures both create and consume their [digital] identities in different ways. This was most keenly reflected in the shared conversations around where we perceive the boundary between our public and private lives. The mass use of social services such as Facebook can appear to have a homogenising effect, erasing cultural distinctions through normalised ‘social-networking’ practices. Many of our participants felt that this was an area that would benefit from further empirical  research to, at the very least, expand our dominant Westernised perspectives of online identity.

Other key points that came back from the session were, in brief:

  • An acceptance that in a connected global space, not only is it difficult to avoid having an online identity but that it is also advantageous to be proactive in managing it. Therefore the importance of teaching what we might call  digital identity literacy skills needs to be on the agenda at all sectoral levels;
  • There must be more awareness raising and advocacy around the potential risks associated with the use of social media and the long term impact that digital tracks and traces can have on our online identities, for example in relation to career building and the job market;
  • Rather than try to respond to fears around using the Internet by heavily monitoring and containing our online activity we should over time learn to accept the contradictions between the differing roles and perspectives that are presented by ourselves and others;
  • Separating personal from professional activity is difficult, if not impossible to achieve. But do we really need to maintain this divide? We could not reach consensus on this issue and the debate circled around the question of aggregation versus compartmentalisation of online activities;
  • Towards the end of the session someone asked “How should we interpret other people’s online presence?”. An interesting question suggesting that reading and interpreting online identities is in itself a skill.

It was a valuable session and we are grateful for the input of all those who attended and we hope that the person who at the end of the workshop declared “I do not want to have a digital identity as it makes me too nervous” has now overcome her anxieties.

Next on the agenda: we are looking forward to Online Educa Berlin ’09 where will we take these issues forward into our symposium discussion session on (yes you guessed it)  ‘Digital Identity’.


Call for proposals deadline: November 30th 2009
Full chapters deadline: January 30th 2010

There is a Call for Chapters for a new book entitled “Digital Identity and Social Media” which will be published by IGI Global in early 2011. It is an exciting project and we encourage anyone with an interest in digital identity matters to look through the details and send us a proposal. Submissions on any of the following themes are encouraged:

  • Conceptual frameworks and approaches to understanding digital identity;
  • The impact of new technologies, social software and social media, on conceptualisations of [digital] identity;
  • Authenticity and trust in identity based transactions;
  • Machine mediated identities;
  • Digital identity management – defending identity, reputation management and risk;
  • The digital self and blurring boundaries between public and private spaces;
  • Lifelong learning and the importance of digital identity for transitions from school to adult life and beyond;
  • Negotiating individual, group, community and network based digital identities;
  • Personalisation software and the impact on digital identities;
  • The economic, societal, ethical and political issues raised by the increased availability of personal information;
  • Digital literacies and accessibility in relation to digital identities;
  • Identity, trust and authenticity in social networks;
  • Relations between communities, networks, groups and individual identities;
  • Personalisation technologies and digital identity;
  • Cultural dynamics of online identity;
  • Social media and emerging identity practices;
  • Presence technologies, online visibility and digital identity.

Full details here: Call For Chapters Digital Identity Book (pdf)

We look forward to hearing from you.


Interoperability scenario diagram

Interoperability scenario diagram

Using the plugin to create CVs is a simple three step process: create a Master CV, customise Views and Export them!

  1. Once plugged into the WordPress blogging platform, the user can store his/her data in a single XML file that acts as a vault for personal and professional information: this is the Master CV. The user can create one storage file or Master CV per language, in any of the official languages of the European Union.
  2. With the data contained in the Master CV, the user can create as many customised Views he/she needs. At least three structured formats are provided: a short profile, the standardised Europass CV format and a HR-XML compatible CV. The user can also take advantage of customisation functionalities in terms of choice of information display and integration with other media to create free form CVs.
  3. For each View, a range of Export possibilities exist: ODT, PDF, HTML, XHTML and XML. Online publishing can also be password protected to target CVs to particular audiences.