SecurityRatty :: tag: single-mode
Featured Articles :: Managing an Exchange 2007 Single Copy Cluster (SCC) setup :: IBM buys single sign-on technology for Tivoli :: Single sign-on: Sensible security on scale :: Dynamic Security Assertion Markup Language: Simplifying Single Sign-On :: Passlogix takes single sign-on mobile :: Secrets of a Road Warrior :: Mashup of the Titans :: Cached Malware Embedded Sites :: Review of My 2007 Security Predictions: Too Wimpy :: Adding webwise.net into the CNI
Get an overview of the Exchange Server 2007 Single Copy Cluster (SCC) architecture and learn how to set up the SCC feature in a virtual server environment
Single sign-on is no longer the preserve of large companies. With the right tools, midmarket companies can also enjoy the benefits and convenience of one password
Dynamic Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) simplifies the establishment of secure single sign-on between Web applications in different organizations by automating the exchange of SAML configuration information and simplifying cryptographic trust establishment
I have been a road warrior since just after 9/11. For the past 5 years I have spent at least 6 months of the year somewhere other than where I call home. At one point after .NET was released in 2002, I spent over a year and a half visiting 2 cities a week (fly out Sunday, speak at a seminar from 7:30 to 5:00 Monday and Tuesday, fly home Tuesday...
Information Security - an Oxymoron for the information age
Always the beautiful answer who asks a more beautiful question. e. e. cummings
or why i am with Gelernter
This is a mashup of Saltzer & Schroeder's famous information security principles with David Gelernter's Manifesto
The premise of this mashup is to examine the paper by Saltzer and...
Google, with its almost real-time crawling capabilities, has rarely proved useful while researching malware embedded sites who were cleaned before they could be analyzed, mainly popular sites who get crawled several times daily. However, Yahoo's and MSN's search engines, with MSN providing Archive.org type of historical crawling content, have...
It is time to check how my last year's predictions ( My Security Predictions for 2007 ... Go! ) fared. I am shocked that many of my colleagues looooove to predict, but seem to shy away from reviewing them in the end of the year ( big ego - small 'you know whats
So, one liner summary of status of my 2007 predictions : they were too wimpy. In more...