#152 - 2022 Trends in Securing Digital Identities with Julie Smith - podcast episode cover

#152 - 2022 Trends in Securing Digital Identities with Julie Smith

Jun 27, 202247 minEp. 152
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Episode description

Jim and Jeff talk with Julie Smith, Executive Director at the Identity Defined Security Alliance, about their recent report "2022 Trends in Securing Digital Identities" and some of the key findings they observed.

Connect with Julie: https://www.linkedin.com/in/juliaesmith/

Identity Defined Security Alliance: https://www.idsalliance.org/

Connect with Jim and Jeff on LinkedIn here:

Jim McDonald: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jimmcdonaldpmp/

Jeff Steadman: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffsteadman/

Visit the show at www.IdentityAtTheCenter.com, follow @IDACPodcast on Twitter, and check out our live streams at www.idac.live

Transcript

You're listening to the identity of the center podcast, this is the show that talks about identity and access management and making sure you know who has access to what let's get started. Welcome to the identity of the center podcast. I'm Jeff. And that's Jim. Hey, Jim hey, Jeff, how are you? Oh, not so bad yourself. There's a little bit of a delay there, I think. Oh, I don't know.

But I was going to say, just got back from vacation, so I'm not 100% tune back in, you know, is on vacation at the beach of rocking the SPF, 50, basically, just short of white paint. On my skin just to make sure I don't cook in that, you know, Myrtle Beach sun, which is where I was. But I saw talking to, you know, our old friend. So he has part your name apart, my name Jeffrey MacDonald and he's later skin than me and he's like, Jim.

You're such a rookie SPF 50. Come on, SPF 70 at a minimum. So there's a rookie numbers you gotta pump those up. Yeah, there you go. Good movie, quote there, Jeff. Uh-huh. Yeah. I'm I'm rather pasty myself. I have like, I have two stages of tan either. I'm not tan or I'm burned. There's like nothing in between. Yeah. What's the skin peels off? There's plenty of untanned skin below it right? Yeah, exactly. So I try to, you know, I I try to stay indoors.

I don't like the heat, I don't like the humidity so the beach is not really my favorite thing unless it is in a more, let's call temperate climate. I'm not not about the hot sun, I'll be under the I'll be Under the Umbrella, enjoying the ocean breeze, and that's where you'll find me while the best part about the trip to Myrtle Beach was, there's a concert going on, the Carolina Country Music Fest, a lot of great acts and the ones that I really wanted to see where I'd night.

So the sum is already down. The breeze has already coming in it. The concert was pretty much right on the beach so as fantastic, that's a cool setting for a concert, I don't think I've ever been to a Beach concert like a really legit Beach concert right before. Which is unfortunate but I guess to each their own. Hey man, I enjoyed it. So, plenty of Bud Light available. That's not surprising one bit. They probably sponsored it, right?

I think Coors Light may be sponsor it, because there are a lot of people on stage, showing Coors Light and you know that that Denver beer is pretty popular. Hmm. Well, speaking of Denver, why don't we get into our main topic today? She's like laughing at us like how stupid we are as we start to

show off. But we're going to talk about a about a topic that we've covered before, but it's time for an update and to help us with that, we've got Julie Smith, she's the executive director at the identity to find security. Alliance. Welcome back, Julie. Thanks Jeff. Jim, it's always a pleasure to be here with you all so I appreciate it. Feel The invitation, I got a little hesitancy there.

When you were kind of saying that I and the reason I get that is because the mysterious way that I introduce our topic. What we're going to be talking about is the 2022 Trends and securing digital identities, which is something that we've actually been doing episodes on this. I guess this is maybe our second or maybe third time that we kind of got around this. So the trends report has become a trend into itself but before we get too far along. Wrong. I want to make a note.

You are the current record holder for number of appearances, on, on the podcast, use a zero fifth appearance. You've been with us since episode 57 and then 88 and then 99 and then 140 and now this should be episode number 152. I am. And I have to say that I'm a little bit disappointed so far, and I'm hoping that episode 5 is

the is the is the lucky one? Where we get to finally hear from Sly, the cat, Has been suspiciously quiet in previous episodes makes me a little concerned Sly if you're out there, make a noise. So we know that you're okay and that you actually exist. I'll just leave it at that. Julie. How about that? He does exist and he might he might make an appearance this time after after five episodes. It's I think it probably is time but let's hope maybe he doesn't justify.

Despair the audience, but yeah. Thanks for having me. I appreciate it. And I'm not sure exactly why I have the honor of being here the most, maybe I maybe I reach out to you the most or not. Sure exactly why that is, but happy to have the reigning champion on her. Well, I'm happy your judges and this is this has been like definitely a mutual relationship.

We actually got to you and I got to actually meet for the first time face to face at RSA a few weeks ago, we do the proverbial fist bump and chatted on the corner outside and inside the W Hotel there in San Francisco, which is very cool. But yeah, I think, you know, we Jim and I like to have good conversations, right? Identity. And every time you're on, we have a good conversation around it done and I think that's what we're gonna do today.

So no pressure We had nothing whatsoever, but it was great meeting. You face to face and Gem, you were sorely missed last week at RSA, although God only knows what you might have taken home as apparently. A lot of people that wear out in San Francisco, last week did so be thankful that you weren't there and sounds like you were having a lot more fun and a beach anyway.

So I did enjoy the beach but you know one thing I wanted to ask you your the other way to look at it is that you're the biggest repeat offender in. Terms of being on the show maybe you just for the audience to sake so they don't have to go back. Jeff did a great job of talking about all the different episodes you're on but in case they're not familiar with idea. Say, just kind of give us a summary elevator pitch. What is idea?

Say, yeah, sure. So the idea say our identity to find security Alliance, some people even call us. It's a which always makes me Flinch a little bit but we are a an organization, a non-profit. Stop it. I call this a trade Association focused on creating resources and help organizations reduce the risk of an identity relating breach. So all of our content is freely available on our website, it's all vendor-neutral.

We have if you incorporate all of our members, we have over 40 members, who participate, and creating content writing blogs hosting webinars, or I host the webinars. They Provide the expert, the expert perspectives. And so, you know, we're really all about educating organizations on how they secure their digital identities.

So membership wise, you know, I talked about more than 40 30 of those our vendor members but we also have membership opportunities for and practitioners or end end users if you will, in the form of contributor memberships as well as corporate memberships. So that's really for individuals who are out there, living in the trenches, in their security teams and, you know, trying to drive identity security in their

organizations. And they have an opportunity to come and network with their peers, learn from an amazing group of experts. In this space can get CPE credits towards their cissp certification and and thought leaders. We have a great platform for people if they're looking to become a thought leader in the space as well. So, there's lots of benefits to being part of the organization and really The primary driver I think, is to make an impact and give back to the community.

Yeah, I would definitely encourage folks to check out that contributor membership because I think it is an opportunity to be part of the identity Community. I think a lot of people have great ideas out there. And for the most part, this is how Jim and I contribute is we do this stupid podcast every week. Other people like to write blogs other people like to do webinars, write or speak at conferences or whatever.

Maybe this is another opportunity for people to get involved in this space and there is plenty of room for people to give back and contribute. So Very cool. I think the other thing that that hasn't been mentioned is identity management day. That's something that got started. And know, we've had a few different conversations around that over the years.

I think this was the second annual identity management day earlier earlier this year, but your organization also kind of partnered up with it, was at the national cyber security Alliance as well to it was. Yeah, about that. Yeah, and yeah. So back to your, my participation five times on the on the podcast. So at least two of those where identity management. Okay. So last April 12th was our second annual identity management day.

We had a great virtual conference where we had five sessions and 25, I think speakers talking about all things identity from you know, how do we prevent identity related attacks today to what's the future of identity look like. So that's that is an important one and I think a couple of those guest spots on your podcast we're also related to our research which is another Main component, one of the things we're going to talk about today but we've we've published now for different research

reports and to your point. Jeff, this will be the second specific Trends report although we'd kind of over the years pulled questions from other reports into this one. With the idea that maybe over time we become the Verizon data breach investigations report very aspirational obviously but just that's Focus very specifically. if eclis on identity related breaches and all things around bringing identity and security teams together Well the key to

everything is consistency. That's how we've grown to be this multi-million listener, podcasts over the last several years. So you definitely being consistent important part of that you mentioned the future and let's talk about sort of, you know, I guess the presence and some of the trends we've seen around this report. The 2022 Trends is carrying digital identities I guess, before we start to get into some of the findings. You mentioned this is the second time that it's come out for

kicking down to fourth wall. Here we're recording this on Monday, June 20th but this I won't actually go live until next Monday. By the time I got around to be able to edit it, but I believe the report comes out. This Wednesday was a June 20 seconds. Is that right correct? Yep. It's it'll put be published on Wednesday the full report. Hopefully you'll see a number of Articles and different perspectives on the results of the survey and its research,

right? So the data is what the data is and we hope that lots of different organizations whether they're in the media space or member companies or other organizations who are interested in the data that we're publishing provide their commentary, their perspectives on it. Use the data in the report to support you know product releases and just perspectives on the on the industry as a whole. So you know, it's really research that we conduct kind of

keeping a tech keeping tabs on these. the trends and securing digital identities and and its data that's really available for interpretation by the broader can So who responds to this? I guess Ken to kind of level set. So people know where this data is coming from. Is it coming from companies as a coming?

From individuals, it coming from both, I guess, what, what sort of the typical respondent look like, yeah, so it is coming from individuals inside sort of end user companies across a range of Industries Financial Services, Healthcare technology employees over. And so it is really a view into the Enterprise, its it security and identity professionals. And so they have responsibility for identity and identity security in some way shape or form, we had over 500

respondents to the survey. It's actually conducted by an organization. We've worked with for all of our research approach called dimensional research and they that, you know, part of the value that they provide, And as they do have a group of people that are open to taking these kinds of surveys. So it's, yeah, it's a good group and they fill it out wearing their company hats.

And although this year, we did at sneak in a couple of questions to get their own personal perspectives around, password security and that kind of thing. So but otherwise they are speaking on behalf of practitioner inside an organization. So I think that is interesting taking that practitioner response because sometimes, you know, I think in the identity industry sometimes we kind of see it through our own lens of.

Well, this is the way it should be and you know how we would want to see it done, but that doesn't always match up with the real world and I was actually getting done. So I always liked research like this, that is, you know, taking real world people and asking them real world questions and what are the challenges and things are coming out and it leads me to my next question which is you know, based on Tan this report that's going to be coming out.

Is there what was the most interesting thing or finding that you think came out of it? Yeah I think this review this year's report you we continue to ask the question every year obviously because it's a trend report about or whether organization is experience and identity related breach. And and in this year the number was 84%. I compared to last year 79 percent of the time frames are a little bit different this year. We asked have you an experience?

And identity related breach in the last year and the last report we asked in about a two-year timeframe. So a little bit of a difference just in terms of the timeframe but 84% of those organizations over 79 last year and we also asked could this breach have been prevented or minimized and we asked specifically about what we would consider some Basic identity and access management capabilities as well as the

security outcomes that we recommend. 96% said, that that the breach could have been prevented or minimized and the leading Contender was MFA. So, you know, had an organization implemented MFA for all of their users than that. Breach would have been prevented. And my face is one of those things we've been talking about or I think Very long time and has been a recommendation coming out of the best practices organizations for quite some

time. So if there's just a couple of things in the report that you'll see that are just the basics and you know, these breeches that end up being relatively significant could have been prevented had some of these Technologies and capabilities been implemented. Yeah. Want to show that 84% identity breaches to me that Was an alarming statistic but this other alarming statistic that I want to point to that was in the report. What I read that I was like,

there's no, it's pretty obvious. Why this is happening. So it was 51 percent of organizations typically remove access for former employee within a day. But only twenty twenty six percent always do that. To me, is an alarming statistic, like, are you kidding me? 20% percent of organizations. That they consistently remove access within a day. That's, that's not even close to

high enough. Now, I have my thoughts on maybe why that is, but I'd love to hear what your thoughts are and also, you know, throw it over to Jeff for his comments and you know, what do you believe? Lisa. Such a low number in that area. Yeah, I from my perspective, it's all about automation. We, I know you guys have had 10 Jones on the, on the show. At least once and he talks about automation just in general is one of the key ways that a lot

of our problems could be solved. But you think about it the number of applications that and any given employee has access to on it on a daily basis to do their job if they decide to leave the organization or they change roles, probably don't know what applications that That employee has access to much less, being able to remove permissions from one place and have it replicate across all the application. So I think it's just a Time intensive exercise.

Then in a lot of people, a lot of organizations have it implemented automation to make that easy. That's my, that's my perspective. Jeff. What are your thoughts? I I agree with Julie, I think this is not a situation where people don't want to do the right things.

I think it's a lack of awareness that even these accounts exist, you know, removing access from all of the different places that a person might have access to, in an organization, the large, the organization, the harder that becomes, the more decentralized, the organization when it comes to Identity and access management as either a program or provisioning, whatever it might be, also May comes much more.

Difficult. I didn't want to get into this, but now I feel like I have to because this has affected me literally in the real world today. If you've been following the show, you know, that I am in the process of moving across state lines, moving from Chicago, Illinois area, to North Carolina. And, of course, anybody who's purchased a home knows that you're working with lawyers and mortgage companies and Realtors,

and a whole bunch of things. I was supposed to close on my house, this Wednesday. The 20 seconds that is not happening because of an identity and access management Problem by a combination of the mortgage company. I'm working with and an individual within a law firm and access not being removed from another Law Firm that this individual used to work for that caused.

A whole bunch of issues with data going to the wrong law firm, mine, this case, All because this person's access was not removed when she transferred from one Law Firm to another Law Firm. So that I am a living world example of, you know, now might not be, this is a first world

problem. So I'm not gonna, you know, moan and whine and complain about it too much, but a supposed to close on Wednesday. And now I'm scrambling to close by Friday so that I'm not homeless over the weekend and in North Carolina, waiting for waiting for papers to sign. So, I do, I believe this number. Yes, absolutely. As I've now seen in the real world and it is affecting my

life. Plus, I told you, I don't think homelessness is a first world problem but okay, but yeah, the good story, you know, kind of I think I have a pessimistic and an optimistic view of this. My pessimistic view is what you brought the key point there, jeff, which is removing all access when you think about, About. Removing all when you think about the 26 percent of organizations that do remove people in within one day, it's

probably not all access. It's probably active directory account and the person responding to the survey feels confident that removing active directory, removes quote-unquote all access. The reality of it is most organizations have you know many many applications that are not covered just by the active directory account. The, the optimistic or the alternative view to this is I think Julie's right? In terms of automation, I think, you know, there are a lot of organizations that are just

under invested. I am and some that are smaller organizations, that it's not that they're appropriately, invested their underinvested because this is becoming such an important area, but they might have one or two it people and they're doing everything from, you know, Cloning laptops and supporting phones and doing email and doing, oh yeah, doing identity and access management as well. So I think that could have a big impact in terms of driving down

this, this number as well. But you know, even the 26 if you only think the pessimistic view it's even the 26 percent number could potentially be inflated but I did want to ask Julie another question which was Another statistic that I was looking at was around risky Behavior, being reduced, when Executives put focus on identity security, a lot of the the focus was around, you know, if the executive speak publicly to employees about password security, but also a statistic

about it security stakeholders admitting to risky security Behavior. So I wondered if Add a little bit of flavor to each of those areas. Yeah sure. So that question kind of came out of a research report that we did.

I think I talked about it already, the stakeholder perspective which we kind of tied into the line of business user and how, you know, how to does identity and access management affect them and and one of the things we ask that line of business group and it was really kind of a question that we put in there. Just because we thought it might be interesting to get some perspective on just how, how, well does the average user protect their corporate

passwords. And so we asked a list of provide a list of risky, behaviors things like you have you shared passwords through slack or Microsoft teams, do you reuse passwords be written passwords down on a sticky note, you know, just just things that I think we would all consider. Poor secure, password hygiene. But yet, we probably all do them

too. And we thought it'd be interesting to try and get at this sort of what's the state prevention of identity related breaches as it relates to culture and human behaviors and protecting passwords right at times. Back to the idea, a lot of times it's a cliche that gets thrown around a lot. Is that people are the weakest link in the security chain.

And so we wanted to try and tap into that as well as to tap into the idea that it's not just about security technology, but it's also about just creating a security-minded culture within an organization. So that's really where the question came from. So we pulled the question forward from one of the previous research reports, and we wanted

to ask specifically it security. identity people about how well they protect their passwords and so what we found is I think forty forty percent of them said oh you know we never we never displaying eighties bad behaviors versus I think it was in the 30s for line of business folks and then again kind of getting at this culture and security mindedness within an organization we thought well is there any any way that At How would, how would a culture evolved.

And one way that it might have all this through leadership support protecting passwords. And so, we asked a question around, what's do Executives speak about password, security in your organization? And who is the highest level Executives? So is it, is it the board level? Is it senior Executives? Is it security Executives? Is that, you know, See us security leadership. And what we found is that and then how do those two things correlate, right? So, do people take better care

of their passwords? If security leadership is talking about how important it is in their organization from an

overall security perspective. And we found that 72% of the eye of the respondents to this survey said that they do take better care of Their passwords when an executive is talking about it. So it's just kind of trying to get it this you know just culture affect their individual behavior and I think the answer is yes so that was sort of really the you know, really the ankle that we took that that the state of prevention in 2022 is not necessarily always tied to

technology and expertise in the organization but it also is tied to behaviors. And culture, and we did ask some questions around training as well. So, you know, kind of looking at it from both of those perspectives and, and maybe a little bit. Removing the idea, that, that users are your our primary attack vector. And turning that into users, could be a primary line of defense. Yes, I find that research, really your kind of reinforces other research that I've seen that.

Yes, continuing to drive, security, awareness the organization. And it's not a one-time thing. You have to repeatedly, kind of get the message out and make sure that people understand, you know that it's it's it's something that you need to be aware of it all times.

I want to ask one more question on the report and that was around something I found interesting and timely Russia and Ukraine. So there were a couple of questions around it and the one that that I guess struck my eye the most What was the question about? And this is what the question was.

Has the recent russia-ukraine crisis, increased visibility of your company's identity and security activities among non technology leadership and I'm looking at this pie chart and it tells me that two-thirds of your respondents said yes there was some increase. Now it might have been a mightier increase might have a significant increase maybe somewhere in between but I look at this and say, okay clearly there has been some impact on the visibility of You know, are

weak properly protected. Do we have the proper identity security in place, right? Those are some things, I guess. Any, any color you want to add to that or are my findings? Kind of, jiving, with will kind of what you're thinking, as well? Or am?

I totally crazy? I would align with you, but I will tell you that, you know, this is data right as my researcher pounds into me. This is data and, you know, you present the data and then people form their own Our own opinions from it or own perspectives and they kind of look at it through

their own lens. I, you know, as part of our process for getting the word out about this risk report, we've been doing pitching to the press and I did have one one request that came back through from a publication that journalist it's going to write an article for us which is fantastic.

And their perspective was, wow, it doesn't really seem at all, like there's been And increase awareness but or, you know, increase visibility or increased budget because the Ukraine Russia Khan which I thought was really interesting, right? So just go, just goes to say that we all kind of, I guess it's back to the is the dress gold and white or is it, it was it blue and white or whatever. Right? The same dress and everybody saw it a little bit differently.

And that's exactly how it is with data. So, like, um, yeah, well, here's how we will cook Tommy Boy, quote for you, a simple. No would have been sufficient, got to throw the movie quotes and where appropriate. So Julie, last last week's episode, we asked a group of identi Rowdy, what the differences between digital identity and identity and access management. Those two terms, I you titled this report 2022 Trends in

securing digital identities. So this is Didn't get your answers part of that last episode. I'm going to pose that question. But you on the spot posed that question to you. Now, what's the difference between digital identity and identity and access management? And keep in mind? Three had seven different answers for seven different people. Yeah, nobody has answered this identical yet. So this is your chance to give your flavor to it.

Well, I'm afraid to answer from Jeff because it's going to be he's going to want just a very concise answer, so I will I'll say this floor is yours. Yeah, so I think I did a digital identity as the thing, the identity, the attributes, you know, maybe it's the Biometrics associated with. But it's the thing that we're protecting and managing and validating, right? And then identity and access management, we actually would suggest.

And we have a Blog, I hear the talks about it, that identity and access management is of all to identity security because it's kind of gone. And really access management and its identity security is about getting to a trusted identity and you know, whether it's validating and on the front front end, it's, you know, protecting it through authentication and and you know, maybe offers authorization and then that's just the management of it.

Some of the things we talked about around D provisioning, so that's really identity. Security is an evolution of identity and access management and then in our world, identity Define security is taking that trusted identity. Adding some context to it and using that combination of things to protect resources. So that's my answer. I think it's a good one. I think now we have eight

different answers. I think this is really interesting from a just, I guess the psychological aspect of identity and access management is that even people who are in the identity space, can't necessarily agree on the terminology and the definitions. And I think that's actually okay, I'm fine with that because I think we do have different perspectives that we bring to it. Alright, let's go ahead and start to wrap things up because I know Julie you been super generous or time.

About to hit identify verse. I will just say again. Congratulations on his research. It is awesome stuff. I love reading it. I'd like to also cite it and some of my conversations that I have with other folks in industry or customers or clients. I would certainly encourage people who haven't checked it out already. Go to the identity defines curry Alliance website, IDs Alliance dot-org, the research will be there and definitely want people to check it out.

But it wouldn't be an identity, the center episode without getting into something. Being silly /. Stupid at the end. What is your favorite comedian or style of Comedy? Mmm, so I have a new favorite comedian and I was in New York City a couple weekends ago and we went to the Comedy Cellar. And somewhat, I think actually a couple of familiar faces came on the stage, which was amazingly cool. But one of them was a guy that I

have seen in billions. I don't know if you guys watch the show billions on HBO, the guy by the name of Mike Birbiglia, which I kind of knew but didn't really know that he was a stand-up comedian and it turns out he is very popular stand-up comedian and he's my new favorite comedian. He is, I have thought a lot about this.

I kind of think he's the clean version of Dave Chappelle and I love Dave Chappelle, because I think he has is an amazing Storyteller. His topics are a little bit interesting and I think Mike Birbiglia is the same way. He just, he is an amazing. Storyteller. He has an interesting way of kind of weaving things together and I'm a fan. I've been binge-watching and maybe watch a couple episodes twice of his Netflix series on, you know, stand-up comedy series.

So he's my new favorite comedian and I just love his storytelling style and it's, he's fantastic. That's a good pick. I like microvilli a lot. I'm a big fan of Comedy. And he is definitely up there, I think you're totally right. He's a great Storyteller. I think that's what separates a lot of. You know, the I guess the good folks who are good at. Comedy stand-up specifically is being will tell that story. I'm just curious.

I think for people who aren't familiar Comedy Central in New York City is pretty legendary comedy club that a lot of big-name comics will go to and sometimes they sort of drop in unannounced even and kind of, you know, you might go there to say one Act and all of a sudden you're seeing two or three other people who are working out material and you're able to kind of kind of peek behind the curtain. I'm curious. Who did you see anyone else there? Besides Michael be good from a

name recognition. Yeah well there I think there were five Comedians and I'm not going to get all their names right? Maybe sex actually I thought and see I mean it started out in the MC was fantastic and were like, wow, okay, this guy's great like who else is coming on? They all had, it was funny because they all had certain

that likes. Chips in one way or another Ryan Hamilton. I don't know if you know that name, I think he's on, he's on Netflix, he was there Chris De Stefano which apparently he is. He was the headliner. He's not somebody that I know. But the, you know, the younger and set that we are with couple 20 mid, 20 year, olds were like, oh my gosh, she's the best, he was the headliner.

And yeah, the other the other names Escape me at this point but it we just went into a cold and had tickets and, you know, just all of a sudden these fantastic comedians, every single one of them came on stage so it was very cool. That's awesome. I think that's actually a bucket was cited. For me is, I've never been able to hit a venue like that. Go see comedians destefano's a good one. He's like a New York Comic. She's kind of well-known and sort of that space.

And you'll find that there's like East Coast West Coast, you know, kind of circles of Comedians and things like that. Jim. How about yourself? Who's your favorite comedian or do you have a favorite style of Comedy? So it's interesting when we, when I first heard this question, the the name Richard Pryor popped into my head. I've really liked some of those old comedy routines because that the further you go back in 70s and 80s and stuff, every time you are going, oh my God, that's

so wrong. You know, it's and you know you would definitely get Sold it today's world. So, you know, even as you move through, like I love, you know, Chris Rock. I love Chappelle, I mean, all those comedians to me, or fantastic, but I don't only love like the outrageous and I love like Seinfeld. I love Bob Newhart like that dry, you know, sarcastic comedy. And I also love like, What would you call like Saturday Night Live and In Living Color and like, Schedule C schedule? Yeah. Yeah.

Like sketch basically. Yeah. Yes. Catch and us watching again, the other day. Remember, I brought it up to you. Is that ship at the Chappelle show where he had, you know, Rick James and was Eddie Murphy's brother. Oh my God, that's like one of the funniest things that really Murphy nonce. Yep. Charlie Murphy. Charlie Murphy Yeah. Hilarious. So anybody who has a scene that skid before go to YouTube and search for Rick James. Charlie Murphy. You'll cry. Your eyes out.

Yeah. It's a good Chappelle Show bed for sure. I, you know, there are so many good Comedians and I've been fortunate enough to hear a lot of a lot of good material. I don't know if I could narrow it down to one. I think I go in phases. So like right now what I've been listening to a lot of is Anthony Jeselnik and And Daniel Tosh for some reason keeps coming up but there's also Patton Oswalt who is a brilliant stand-up.

Most people kind of may not be familiar with the stand up because they see him in Marvel. Kind of things and TV stuff. For big lie is good. If you're really like comedy. I think one of my favorite things of all time is it was a movie, but it's really just two hours of stand up. And it's the original Kings of Comedy and, you know, I had Steve Harvey. Bernie Mac. Trying to think where the other folks were, but I laughed my you-know-what off for a good solid, two hours.

I actually saw it in the theater and it was so good. It was so funny. Bernie Mac's stand up, you know, as part of the original Kings of Comedy is in my mind, one of the most legendary performances, I think he absolutely nailed it and it was fantastic, but there's been so many good ones. It's hard for me too hard for you to pick one because I think I'd enjoy them all and there's so many different styles. Giles comes to it. But yeah, I guess I don't think

I'm like laughing so hard. I'm crying. And I'm also feeling guilty for laughing at what he just said. Well, I think it's part of the young that I think that's Community. I think. I mean, I think that's part of Comedy. Right. I think it's sometimes it's personal. Sometimes, it's raw. Sometimes it's hitting on Raw nerves within sort of the public Consciousness, but being able to make light of it or joke about

it, right? I think, you know, I'm Perfect one to make jokes at my own expense expense, obviously, so so yeah, yeah. But at the end of the day, you know, there's nothing better than just like a really awesome belly laugh, right. I mean, that's, there's just like, I don't know if feeds the soul, I think so it's a very subjective, but I'm totally with you. It's like, you know, there is comedy out there for anybody.

Another good one is Ronny Chang. If he's from Legacy from The Daily Show, But he has a stand up, his earlier, stand up for my mistakes, like 2016, or 2017 is on Netflix, highly recommended, he has a great bit about Amazon Prime that my wife and I had been quoting at each other for the last two weeks since we sat down and watched it. But that's another good one. Who was the guy that was? I know you probably want to wrap it up a time and ask you this question, who was the guy?

That was a co-writer with Dave on the Dave Chappelle Show. He has a series of Netflix specials to that are super funny. Brennan, maybe in since last name I think he is very funny. Deal Brennan. Yeah. Emil Brandt. He's a good one. Yes. Yeah. I think he's on. You'll see murder once in a while, on Comedy Central. Yeah, it's interesting to see, you know, some of these comedians who are they might be stand up.

They might be kind of like a writer on a show like Conan O'Brien's, you know, he's so I guess I'm going to consider him a stand-up comedian. But you know, he's obviously performer but he used to write for right The Simpsons, right? And he was on Saturday Night Live as a writer. I things like that is interesting to see some of these folks kind of pull around. John Mulaney is another example or Bill. Hader, Bill, hader's Stephane on Saturday Night Live. I think is one of the funniest

things ever. And if you know, the back story behind it, the fact that so John Mulaney and Bill Hader would write, would write the skit Bill Hader would perform it, but John Mulaney would sneak And new things that Bill Hader would read for the first time on air. Whenever if you ever Google Stephane and Saturday Night Live, he can never hold it together because he's literally reading the cue cards and seeing it for the first time. What are you supposed to say?

And, you know, maybe not necessarily truly safe for work, maybe a little bit PG-13 sometimes but it was on Saturday Night Live. So it's probably okay. But I think that is also one of the most hilarious. Like, B ever is, is the whole Stephane thing, The Saga. over the course of the years that that took That's where is I never heard that story. I actually just bought tickets to go. See, John Mulaney, he's on tour

now. Well he's gonna see him in October. Yeah, he said, we're trying to wrap up anyway, happy to share her story because John Mulaney has a as a bit called the salt and pepper Diner, or something like that. And and basically the story is he went to have lunch with a friend and they the the diner he was at had a jukebox and it was three plays for a dollar, or something like that. And and so they put in like No three or four bucks and they had like twenty one place.

And the whole bit was they played like seven or eight. What's what's new pussycat by? Whose it seems that I can release things at the moment but it's a, it's a famous song. Neil Diamond, I think something like that and they played it eight like seven or eight times in a row. Just to watch what people did in the diner and people are freaking out like, oh, it can't be that again. And then, oh, it's Tom Jones. That's what was Tom Jones.

And then they played, It's Not Unusual by Tom Jones once and then they started playing more. What's new pussycat spy, Tom Jones and the whole the whole thing, the whole bed is very funny. I'm not doing it justice here but I'm only bring it up because I got to do that bit in real life. A few weeks ago, we went to a restaurant, they had one of those Touch Tunes where you can like control the Jukebox through an app. So I spent I'm I am proud and ashamed.

To say this, I spent $18 to buy enough tokens to be able to play. What's new pussycat seven different times. And I will tell you that I got exactly the same reaction from the bit. As I did an in real life, as what happened in the bit, it was amazing. An awesome and I'm happy, I was finally able to pull it off. So I so that tells you that I spend my money well and wisely and my time well and wisely as well. So yeah that's what happened.

Alright. Now let's go ahead and wrap things up because I think I've totally derailed this conversation and I will continue talking for comedy for hours on end. Julie, thank you so much for being with us. You can find the report it'll be up on the IDS Alliance websites, starting June 22nd. So really by the time people listen to this, it will be available any other things that you want to get out there for folks who are listening Julie before we wrap it up.

Um, I don't think so. Anyway, usual pitches check out our website. We got A lot of vendor-neutral resources everything is freely available. There's cases where I might ask you for your contact info otherwise you know check it out. There's there's a lot of good stuff out there as well as the research report that that will be publishing on Wednesday. Very cool. How about Jim yourself? Any final thoughts for this week? Do it.

Ask everybody to support the idea say and whatever way you can if your practitioner check out the practitioner membership, If you're if you work for a company in the digital identity industry, whatever that means consider, you know, push your company to join now. Right on give back, thanks, plenty of the plug kind of voices and spaces for this. Yeah, IDs Alliance dot-org. All right, we'll go ahead and wrap it up this week we do have at some point we'll reconnect on

our weekly live stream at idea. See a that live in the meantime we've got the YouTube replays out there, we're on the web identities. Enter.com. We're on Twitter at Heidi as see podcasts, and fingers crossed. This will actually be my last podcast in the Chicago area. So the next time we talk most likely, I will be in North Carolina. We will see if companies get their IMX together and let me have that have that little win.

So all right with that. Thanks everybody for listening and we'll talk with everyone in the next one. Thanks for Listening to the identity at the center podcast. If you like what you heard, don't forget to subscribe and visit us on the web and identity at the center.com.

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