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Kerberos
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DEFINITION: Kerberos is a secure method for authenticating a request for a service in a computer network. Kerberos was developed in the Athena Project at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The name is taken from Greek mythology; Kerberos was a three-headed dog who guarded the gates of Hades. Kerberos lets a user request an encrypted "ticket" from an authentication process that can
Definition continues below.
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| Recent Vendor Reports on Kerberos |
Strategies for Single Sign-On Success
| sponsored by Aladdin Knowledge Systems
VIDEOCAST:
Watch this video to learn about the '80/20' rule of Single Sign On (SSO), and the best practices for reducing sign-ons.
Posted: 22 Jul 2008 | Premiered: 22 Jul 2008, 09:00 EDT (13:00 GMT)
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A Singular Sensation: SSO and Regulatory Compliance on the iSeries
| sponsored by PowerTech Group
PRODUCT LITERATURE:
Password-elimination single sign-on can simplify and improve functions related to identity and access management that are necessary for regulatory compliance on the iSeries.
Posted: 24 Jul 2006 | Published: 24 Jul 2006
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KERBEROS DEFINITION (continued):
then be used to request a particular service from a server. The user's password does not have to pass through the network. A version of Kerberos (client and server) can be downloaded from MIT or you can buy a commercial version. Briefly and approximately, here's how Kerberos works: - Suppose you want to access a server on another computer (which you may get to by sending a Telnet or similar login request). You know that this server requires a Kerberos "ticket" before it will honor your request.
- To get your ticket, you first request authentication from
Kerberos definition sponsored by SearchSecurity.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
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