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Vittorio Bertocci, Garrett Serack, Caleb Baker

"Understanding Windows CardSpace: An Introduction to the Concepts and Challenges of Digital Identities"


Websites should be careful when implementing passive noti?¬?cation.
They need to do so in such a way that gives a user the option
to dismiss them permanently.
Putting CardSpace to Work
Figure 5-13 Noti?¬?cation when a user does not have a card associated
with his account
Users may still
access their account
without a
card
Figure 5-14 Noti?¬?cation when users have a card associated with their
account
Passive noti?¬?cation
doesn??™t force the
user to acknowledge
the message
296 Guidance for a Relying Party
?–  Perspective: Passive User Noti?¬?cation
During user testing of these scenarios, when users used CardSpace, they sometimes
found themselves changing contexts (switching back from the protected
desktop after sending a token) and suddenly not understanding what had just
transpired. Even though they expected to be logged in to the website, they didn??™t
react as if that is what they had done. Adding in a pop-up message to notify
users about what they had done was very effective and well received. After testing
was completed, a user-experience expert pointed out that pop-up messages
work well in testing, but in the real world, users become irritated with them
quickly and will complain.


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