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		<title>gdp's Comments</title>
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		<link>https://www.intensedebate.com/users/348995</link>
		<description>Comments by MartinKuppinger</description>
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<title>KuppingerCole : Martin Kuppinger: Lokales Kennwortmanagement &ndash; ein Sicherheitsrisiko - Kuppinger Cole</title>
<link>http://www.kuppingercole.com/articles/mk_lokal_sicherheit260710#IDComment93245698</link>
<description>V&amp;ouml;llig korrekt: E-SSO ist zwar ein taktischer L&amp;ouml;sungsansatz, aber man wird ihn auf absehbare Zeit als Erg&amp;auml;nzung brauchen. Dazu geh&amp;ouml;rt immer auch eine starke Authentifizierung - als &amp;quot;versatile&amp;quot; und kontext-abh&amp;auml;ngig implementiert. Konkret: Es geht nicht um einen mehr oder weniger starken Mechanismus, der immer genutzt wird, sondern um flexible L&amp;ouml;sungsans&amp;auml;tze, mit denen f&amp;uuml;r unterschiedliche Nutzergruppen (man denke intern an den Bereich F+E oder das Top-Management, extern an Kunden, verschiedene Arten von Partnern mit unterschiedlichem &amp;quot;Integrationsgrad&amp;quot;,...) und Nutzungssituationen (im Unternehmen, mobil, unterschiedliche Devices,...) die f&amp;uuml;r die durchgef&amp;uuml;hrte Interaktion respektive Transaktion jeweils angemessene Authentifizierung gefordert wird. Nicht &amp;uuml;bersch&amp;auml;tzen sollte man den Implementierungsaufwand f&amp;uuml;r Federation - das Thema l&amp;auml;sst sich mit durchaus &amp;uuml;berschaubarem Aufwand umsetzen. Klar ist E-SSO einfacher zu implementieren, aber in seiner Reichweite auch begrenzt als interner Ansatz. Federation geht deutlich weiter. Deshalb sollte man immer auch hinterfragen, ob Federation als der strategisch wichtigste Ansatz nicht eine machbare Alternative ist, wenn man in andere der genannten Ans&amp;auml;tze investieren will. </description>
<pubDate>Sun, 15 Aug 2010 05:25:31 +0000</pubDate>
<guid>http://www.kuppingercole.com/articles/mk_lokal_sicherheit260710#IDComment93245698</guid>
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<title>Martin Kuppinger : Beyond LDAP - have a look at system.identity</title>
<link>http://blogs.kuppingercole.com/kuppinger/2010/06/20/beyond-ldap-have-a-look-at-system-identity/#IDComment82100374</link>
<description>It is not about having multiple directories with different schemas and different hierarchies on one server. That is not the point, obviously. The point is that within one directory I have one schema. Within this schema, I have one hierarchy (which again is obvious when looking at the concepts of LDAP, the DNs, and so on). Thus based on the same set of data I end up with some inflexibility. I can for sure use Virtual Directory Services on top to create different hierarchical views but that is just a workaround. Thus it is not about whether an RFC is implemented correctly (I assume that M$ is a biased abbreviation for Microsoft). It is also not about LDAP being broken, but LDAP being limited. By the way: For sure I know not only Microsoft Active Directory but many other directory services. Aliases are not sufficient. That is again very obvious to any practicioner, because it is an inefficient workaround. Thus there is the obvious need to rethink this issue. I\\\&#039;m pretty sure that I\\\&#039;ve got some of the points (which were examples). And just because the new concept has been developed by someone from Microsoft it is not necessarily bad. The real bad thing, from my perspective, is being narrowminded. </description>
<pubDate>Fri, 25 Jun 2010 08:23:58 +0000</pubDate>
<guid>http://blogs.kuppingercole.com/kuppinger/2010/06/20/beyond-ldap-have-a-look-at-system-identity/#IDComment82100374</guid>
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<title>Martin Kuppinger : Privileged Account Management</title>
<link>http://blogs.kuppingercole.com/kuppinger/2009/03/12/privileged-account-management/#IDComment16852974</link>
<description>Hi Matt, I don&amp;#039;t think that we can limit PAM to routers, firewalls and other devices with frequently very weak security concepts. For sure, an advanced support for federation as well as for authorization standards (which are still immature) will help. But PAM as well addresses the operating system level, databases and other types of systems. I personally expect that PAM will become more and more part of core IAM solutions (e.g. Provisioning) and will be integrated in these lifecycle management approaches. But specific features for PAM will be required as well in the future - and even when ancient concepts like &amp;quot;root&amp;quot; are replaced by better approaches perhaps sometimes in the future. The question isn&amp;#039;t whether we will need PAM features or not - we will, even while some threats (firewall admins,...) might disappear. The question is whether there will be a separate PAM market segment or an integration into other solutions. I think that there will be both - standalone, sometimes specialized (UNIX/Linux only,...) solutions and integrated approaches. Martin </description>
<pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2009 08:33:22 +0000</pubDate>
<guid>http://blogs.kuppingercole.com/kuppinger/2009/03/12/privileged-account-management/#IDComment16852974</guid>
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