Members of the OASIS Web Services Federation (WSFED) Technical Committee have released an approved draft of WS-Federation version 1.2 for public review. The specification defines mechanisms to allow different security realms to federate, such that authorized access to resources managed in one realm can be provided to security principals whose identities are managed in other realms.This includes mechanisms for brokering of identity, attribute, authentication and authorization assertions between realms, and privacy of federated claims. The public review ends 12 Feb 2009.
Welcome to IDtrust XML.org.
This is the official community gathering place and information resource for identity and trusted infrastructure standards. The site is hosted by the OASIS IDtrust Member Section, a group that encourages new participation from developers and users. This is an open, vendor-neutral community-driven site, and the public is encouraged to contribute content. See more about this site.
WS-Federation 1.2 public review begins
News: Submitted by carolgeyer on Tue, 01/20/2009 - 14:19. Last updated on Tue, 01/20/2009 - 14:24.
New Year’s Resolution: Let’s Talk More about SPML
News: Submitted by dschur on Thu, 01/08/2009 - 16:25.
Jackson Shaw and James McGovern have been blogging recently about one of my favorite topics: Service Provisioning Markup Language (SPML). I’d like to contribute to the discussion.
Blogger: Mark Diodati - Burton Group
Single Sign-On and Social Networks
News: Submitted by dschur on Tue, 12/30/2008 - 20:12.
Call it what you will -- single sign-on, federated identity, one-stop
authentication -- letting users sign on to the Internet once and securely
access network resources anywhere has been one of the industry's enduring
quests. While numerous standards efforts have steadily pursued this
capability, most have been back-end technologies of which users are
mostly unaware. Periodically, however, something brings these efforts
to the foreground. Recent developments surrounding the open source OpenID
authentication -- letting users sign on to the Internet once and securely
access network resources anywhere has been one of the industry's enduring
quests. While numerous standards efforts have steadily pursued this
capability, most have been back-end technologies of which users are
mostly unaware. Periodically, however, something brings these efforts
to the foreground. Recent developments surrounding the open source OpenID
RSA Conference 2009
Event: Submitted by dschur on Tue, 12/30/2008 - 18:29.
Location:
San Francisco, California, USADate:
20 Apr 2009 - 08:00 - 24 Apr 2009 - 00:00Event Type:
ConferenceBurton Group Catalyst Conference 2009
Event: Submitted by dschur on Tue, 12/30/2008 - 18:26.
Location:
San Diego, California, USADate:
27 Jul 2009 - 09:00 - 31 Jul 2009 - 00:00Event Type:
Conference