[Email sent to myOpenID users]<p>Hello,<p>I wanted to reach out personally to let you know that we have made the decision to end of life the myOpenID service. myOpenID will be turned off on February 1, 2014.<p>In 2006 Janrain created myOpenID to fulfill our vision to make registration and login easier on the web for people. Since that time, social networks and email providers such as Facebook, Google, Twitter, LinkedIn and Yahoo! have embraced open identity standards. And now, billions of people who have created accounts with these services can use their identities to easily register and login to sites across the web in the way myOpenID was intended.<p>By 2009 it had become obvious that the vast majority of consumers would prefer to utilize an existing identity from a recognized provider rather than create their own myOpenID account. As a result, our business focus changed to address this desire, and we introduced social login technology. While the technology is slightly different from where we were in 2006, I’m confident that we are still delivering on our initial promise – that people should take control of their online identity and are empowered to carry those identities with them as they navigate the web.<p>For those of you who still actively use myOpenID, I can understand your disappointment to hear this news and apologize if this causes you any inconvenience. To reduce this inconvenience, we are delaying the end of life of the service until February 1, 2014 to give you time to begin using other identities on those sites where you use myOpenID today.<p>Speaking on behalf of Janrain, I truly appreciate your past support of myOpenID.<p>Sincerely,
Larry
Crap.<p>So I have used MyOpenID for years, ever since SO forced me to use it. In every situation where openId was an option I've used it in deference to connecting a google/fb account or creating a new user/pass. I have used it for countless websites. Literally countless. As in, I have used it everywhere and I haven't written down where I've used it, because if I go to log in and I see it supports openid I know that I used myopenid.<p>I also don't know much about the technical aspects of openID (though it sure sounds like an upskilling is about to be forced on me).<p>I have my own domain, and I'm happy to run openid through that, and I'm sure 10 minutes of google's time will make that setup plain.<p>What's not plain is how I migrate from myopenid to my own openid provider? Everything I've signed up with is attached to my xxx.myopenid.com url correct? So do I get to keep that URL somehow and point it to an implementation elsewhere? Or does every website that uses openid have to support migrating between openid urls?
Well, crap. Anyone else have a good endpoint I can redirect to? I don't want one of my social networks to be the king of my identity. I want to own that with my master domain.
One thing nice about myOpenID was that you could auth in with nothing more than your myOpenID, if the consumer (do I have the right part?) allowed it. No name, no email address.<p>claimid.com exists too.
This is a great service and I am uncomfortable with the seemingly universal expectation that everyone should be OK with facebook/twitter/google/linkedin style "corporate" auths.
Even now then web site seems to be down…<p>So what other alternatives do we have? www.clavid.com seems to have a lot of options, but using your own domain name — the way you could do it with myOpenID — isn't one of them.
Wonder if they would consider selling the service to somebody else, who might want to keep it live? Even more, I wonder how much it would cost to run a service like MyOpenID? It would be awesome if we could put together a community backed org to keep it alive...
I would recommend checking out password-less and multi-factor alternatives that support OpenID, like LaunchKey: <a href="https://launchkey.com/docs/openid" rel="nofollow">https://launchkey.com/docs/openid</a><p>(disclosure: co-founder)
Thanks for providing the service so far. You have been my go-to place for creating a whole bunch of anonymous IDs, that I would then use to sign in on various websites.
Phuch, at least I used delegation. I'm not really in the mood of setting up the whole provider code, is there some alternative which I could delegate it to?
Thankfully, the best way to use myOpenID was to delegate to it from the ID you actually wanted to use, so everybody who did this will still be able to log in using their OpenID credentials as soon as they find a replacement to actually be the endpoint.