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  2. Privileged access management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privileged_access_management

    Privileged access management. Privileged Access Management (PAM) is a type of identity management and branch of cybersecurity that focuses on the control, monitoring, and protection of privileged accounts within an organization. Accounts with privileged status grant users enhanced permissions, making them prime targets for attackers due to ...

  3. BeyondTrust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BeyondTrust

    BeyondTrust. BeyondTrust (formerly Symark) is an American company that develops, markets, and supports a family of privileged identity management / access management (PIM/PAM), privileged remote access, and vulnerability management products for UNIX, Linux, Windows and macOS operating systems. BeyondTrust was founded in 2006 and provided Least ...

  4. Customer identity access management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_Identity_Access...

    Customer (or consumer) identity and access management (CIAM) is a subset of the larger concept of identity access management (IAM) that focuses on managing and controlling external parties' access to a business' applications, web portals and digital services. [ 1][ 2] The biggest difference between typical IAM and CIAM is that CIAM gives its ...

  5. Web access management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_Access_Management

    Web access management (WAM) [1] is a form of identity management that controls access to web resources, providing authentication management, policy-based authorizations, audit and reporting services (optional) and single sign-on convenience. Authentication management is the process of determining a user’s (or application’s) identity.

  6. Identity management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_management

    Identity management (ID management) – or identity and access management (IAM) – is the organizational and technical processes for first registering and authorizing access rights in the configuration phase, and then in the operation phase for identifying, authenticating and controlling individuals or groups of people to have access to applications, systems or networks based on previously ...

  7. Unified access management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_access_management

    Unified access management. Unified access management (UAM) refers to an identity management solution that is used by enterprises to manage digital identities and provide secure access to users across multiple devices and applications, both cloud and on-premise. Unified access management solutions provide a single platform from which IT can ...

  8. Federated identity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federated_identity

    Federated identity is related to single sign-on (SSO), in which a user's single authentication ticket, or token, is trusted across multiple IT systems or even organizations. [2][3] SSO is a subset of federated identity management, as it relates only to authentication and is understood on the level of technical interoperability, and it would not ...

  9. Role-based access control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Role-based_access_control

    Role-based access control is a policy-neutral access control mechanism defined around roles and privileges. The components of RBAC such as role-permissions, user-role and role-role relationships make it simple to perform user assignments. A study by NIST has demonstrated that RBAC addresses many needs of commercial and government organizations. [4]