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Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... OAuth protocol OpenID Connect Amazon: 2.0 [1] AOL: 2.0 [2]
OAuth is unrelated to OATH, which is a reference architecture for authentication, not a standard for authorization. However, OAuth is directly related to OpenID Connect (OIDC), since OIDC is an authentication layer built on top of OAuth 2.0. OAuth is also unrelated to XACML, which is an authorization policy standard. OAuth can be used in ...
SAML 1.1/2.0, OAuth 2.0, WS-Federation, OpenID Connect, Kerberos cidaas [17] cidaas by Widas ID GmbH Commercial SAML 2.0, OAuth2, OpenID Connect Citrix Open Cloud [18] Citrix: Commercial SSO Middleware, native service connectors Cloud Identity Manager: McAfee: Commercial SAML 2, OpenID, OAuth, XACML, LDAP v3, JM Cloud Federation Service [19 ...
User-Managed Access (UMA) is an OAuth-based access management protocol standard for party-to-party authorization. [1] Version 1.0 of the standard was approved by the Kantara Initiative on March 23, 2015.
Federated SSO (LDAP and Active Directory), standard protocols (OpenID Connect, OAuth 2.0 and SAML 2.0) for Web, clustering and single sign on. Red Hat Single Sign-On is version of Keycloak for which RedHat provides commercial support. Microsoft account: Microsoft: Proprietary: Microsoft single sign-on web service Microsoft Azure EntraID: Microsoft
The OpenID logo. OpenID is an open standard and decentralized authentication protocol promoted by the non-profit OpenID Foundation.It allows users to be authenticated by co-operating sites (known as relying parties, or RP) using a third-party identity provider (IDP) service, eliminating the need for webmasters to provide their own ad hoc login systems, and allowing users to log in to multiple ...
The following group of IETF RFCs and Internet Drafts comprise a set of interrelated specifications for implementing different aspects of the Token Binding standard. The Token Binding Protocol Version 1.0. [5] Allows client/server applications to create long-lived, uniquely identifiable TLS bindings spanning multiple TLS sessions and connections.
The Central Authentication Service (CAS) is a single sign-on protocol for the web. [1] Its purpose is to permit a user to access multiple applications while providing their credentials (such as user ID and password) only once.