Quest CEO Blog

Thoughts on Technology, Business and the Management of Both.

 

SSO Easy to End Password Pain

by TimBurke
Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Passwords can be an effective way to make sure only those who should have access actually get access.

But now virtually every application demands its own password, and it’s unrealistic to expect end-users to memorize five, ten, twenty different strings of letters, numbers, and symbols to do their jobs.

It’s also unrealistic to expect system administrators not to buckle under the burden of managing these mushrooming password requirements.

For all the password pain expressed by frustrated end-users, the real pain is at the backend, where system administrators spend countless hours defining the levels of access those passwords provide for every application used by each end-user. It’s so complex that mistakes are inevitable. Add these errors to the risky ways end-users deal with passwords and it’s inevitable that the security of vital company information is jeopardized.

The best solution we’ve found is single sign-on (SSO) technology, which shifts where end-user access gets defined from the application level to the gateway. Since SSO means end-users need only a single password, system administrators can easily make and keep track of adjustments to application access.

Ask your technology partner to talk with you about SSO — because there’s a cure for those sign-on blues.

Tags:


Categories: Application Performance | Managed Services | Security


Permalink | Comments (2)

Comments

10/18/2011 3:03:55 AM #

The next time I read a blog, I hope that it doesnt disappoint me as much as this one. I mean, I know it was my choice to read, but I actually thought youd have something interesting to say. All I hear is a bunch of whining about something that you could fix if you werent too busy looking for attention.

Hauk IT - Web Consulting

10/20/2011 7:42:53 PM #

Thanks for writing.

Most readers want to know the broad issues and not get into deep technical talk. I provide a clear overview and often they engage a security  expert to help them subsequently.

If you have specific tech questions, let me know. We like to help. I appreciate your comment.”  

TimBurke

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