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  2. OAuth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OAuth

    OAuth is an authorization protocol, rather than an authentication protocol. Using OAuth on its own as an authentication method may be referred to as pseudo-authentication. [26] The following diagrams highlight the differences between using OpenID (specifically designed as an authentication protocol) and OAuth for authorization.

  3. List of OAuth providers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_OAuth_providers

    List of notable OAuth service providers. Service provider OAuth protocol OpenID Connect Amazon: 2.0 [1] AOL: 2.0 [2] Autodesk: 1.0,2.0 [3] Apple: 2.0 [4] Yes Basecamp ...

  4. List of single sign-on implementations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_single_sign-on...

    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.

  5. User-Managed Access - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User-Managed_Access

    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.

  6. SAML-based products and services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAML-based_products_and...

    SAML 1.1, SAML 2.0, OAuth2, OpenID Connect, OpenID Provider, RADIUS, LDAP, Multi Factor Authentication. Cloud SSO Solution for enterprises to protect on-premise applications such as SSOgen for Oracle EBS , SSOgen for PeopleSoft , SSOgen for JDE , and SSOgen for SAP , with a web server plug-in and Cloud SaaS applications with SAML, OpenID ...

  7. OpenID - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenID

    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 ...

  8. Single sign-on - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single_sign-on

    Example of a single sign-on implementation, Wikimedia Developer (based on Central Authentication Service). Single sign-on (SSO) is an authentication scheme that allows a user to log in with a single SSO ID to any of several related, yet independent, software systems.

  9. XRDS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XRDS

    Besides XRI resolution, examples of typical XRDS usage include: OpenID authentication for discovery and capabilities description of OpenID providers. OAuth discovery for locating OAuth service endpoints and capabilities. The Higgins Project for discovery of Higgins context providers.