Liore Alroy - Passaic NJ, US David Lando - West Orange NJ, US Eduardo Francos - Les Ulis, FR Itamar Hassin - Millburn NJ, US Ariel Rabkin - Berkeley CA, US
Assignee:
PICUP, LLC - Newark NJ
International Classification:
H04L 9/00
US Classification:
713155
Abstract:
Users of Internet services (e.g., SKYPE messaging service, GOOGLETALK messaging service, AOL INSTANT MESSENGER messaging service, and MICROSOFT MESSENGER messaging service) that are initially identified using separate identifiers that may be associated with respective service providers (e.g., email addresses) can manage network identities using a single unified set of account information managed by a registry service. The registry authenticates the user's request(s) to bind a service provider identity to his or her personal registry user record. The registry internally associates the service provider identity to an internal unique identifier that is not exposed to subscribers. When a second user wishes to communicate with a first user, the second user provides any service provider identity that is believed to be associated with the first user to determine if the specified service provider identity appears to match the intended subscriber. If so, the second user may specify a nickname (unique to the second subscriber but not necessarily globally unique) to be associated internally within the registry with the internal unique identifier of the first subscriber as part of the second subscriber's user record. Later, even if the first subscriber has relinquished the service provider identity that was originally used to find the first subscriber, the second subscriber can still find the first subscriber by using the associate nickname without either subscriber ever knowing the internal unique identifier of the first subscriber.
Liore Alroy - Passaic NJ, US David Lando - West Orange NJ, US Eduardo Francos - Les Ulis, FR Itamar Hassin - Millburn NJ, US Ariel Rabkin - Berkeley CA, US
Assignee:
PICUP, LLC - Newark NJ
International Classification:
G06F 15/173
US Classification:
709223
Abstract:
Users of Internet messaging services that are initially identified using separate identifiers that may be associated with respective service providers (e.g., email addresses) can manage network identities using a single unified set of account information managed by a registry service. When a second user wishes to communicate with a first user, the second user provides any service provider identity that is believed to be associated with the first user to determine if the specified service provider identity appears to match the intended subscriber. If so, the second user may specify a nickname (unique to the second subscriber but not necessarily globally unique) to be associated internally within the registry with the internal unique identifier of the first subscriber as part of the second subscriber's user record.
Thoughtworks
Agile Delivery and Transformation Lead
Buildit@Wiprodigital Apr 2017 - May 2019
Principal Consultant
Thoughtworks Aug 1, 2012 - Apr 2017
Delivery Lead, Technical Project Manager
Net2Phone Mar 2009 - Aug 2012
Vice President Software Development
Net2Phone Mar 2004 - Apr 2008
Chief Architect, Vice President Software Development
Education:
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1982 - 1985
Bachelors, Bachelor of Science, International Relations, Philosophy, Sociology
Haifa University, Haifa 1983 - 1984
Skills:
Agile Methodologies Software Development Agile Project Management Cloud Computing Soa Ruby on Rails Rest Unix Software Project Management Telecommunications Soap Git Databases Continuous Integration Testing System Architecture Linux Software Engineering C# Test Driven Development Scrum Voip Object Oriented Design Application Architecture Web Applications Cucumber Service Oriented Architecture Software Design Representational State Transfer C++ Web Services Infrastructure As Code Rspec Tdd Ios Development Embedded Software Mobile Applications Software Quality Assurance Bdd .Net Ansible Serverspec
Interests:
Eating Cooking Civil Rights and Social Action Education Poverty Alleviation Human Rights