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DI

Federated Identity

Intermediate

Assumes familiarity with basic IAM concepts

A system that allows users to use the same identity credentials across multiple independent organizations or domains, enabled by trust relationships between identity providers and service providers.

About Federated Identity

A system that allows users to use the same identity credentials across multiple independent organizations or domains, enabled by trust relationships between identity providers and service providers. This is a intermediate-level concept in the Authentication, SSO domain. Related topics include authentication, cloud-identity.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Federated Identity?

A system that allows users to use the same identity credentials across multiple independent organizations or domains, enabled by trust relationships between identity providers and service providers.

How does Federated Identity work?

Federated Identity works by providing key functionality for identity management, access control, and security. It integrates with other identity components to deliver secure, standards-based workflows in enterprise and consumer applications.

What is Federated Identity used for?

Federated Identity is used in digital identity systems to support secure authentication, authorization, and identity lifecycle management. Common use cases include single sign-on, access governance, API security, and regulatory compliance.

What are the benefits of Federated Identity?

The key benefits of Federated Identity include improved security posture, streamlined user experience, reduced operational overhead, and better compliance with privacy regulations. Organizations adopting Federated Identity can achieve stronger access controls and simplified identity management.

Federated Identity vs identity-federation?

While Federated Identity and identity-federation are related concepts in digital identity, they serve different purposes. Federated Identity focuses on a system that allows users to use the same identity credentials across multiple independent organizations or domains, enabled by trust relationships between identity providers and service providers, whereas identity-federation addresses a complementary aspect of identity and access management. Understanding both is essential for building comprehensive security architectures.

Related Terms

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