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Getting to know you: The rise of roles-based IDs

Getting to know you: The rise of roles-based IDs

By:  Tim Wilson  On: 06 Jan 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Regulatory and compliance requirements are the big driver behind demand for technology that governs access to information based on user rights and restrictions. Let Telus, M-Tech and other Canadian firms bring you up to speed

It seems like fair advice not to bring a big vendor in at the start of a project. And if one goes first to a company with a heavy services component, it makes sense to see who they’re aligned with (although Okiok is a strong Siemens partner, the company claims vendor neutrality). As a rule of thumb, the more specialized the company, the more likely it is that the advice will not bleed into inappropriate areas.

To get a sense of ROI, organizations need to balance the timelines and investments against savings based on speedier provisioning, as well as – and this is near impossible to calculate – the potential cost of having the wrong people access sensitive data.

When all is said and done, a working system should save on labour costs. “This is more efficient change management,” says Shoham. “It means effective lifecycle management and the efficient onboarding of new users, as well as more prompt and reliable access termination to reduce security exposures.”

The security argument is a common one, and often tied in with the other drivers of IDM adoption, compliance and privacy. However, even the best IDM system cannot eliminate data leakage. This is particularly true if network segmentation issues are not properly dealt with. This isn’t just a software issue, but requires and organizational understa








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Tim Wilson Tim Wilson is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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