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ID management offers more than just security

ID management offers more than just security

By:  Dan McLean  On: 22 Aug 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Today’s business is a world of mobile work forces, networks and scattered places where information about employees is stored. Wouldn’t it be great to have technology that makes it easier to manage the flow of corporate information, improve the quality of data gathered by a business, and have a tighter rein on what users can do when it comes to computing?

Today’s business is a world of mobile work forces, networks and scattered places where information about employees is stored. Wouldn’t it be great to have technology that makes it easier to manage the flow of corporate information, improve the quality of data gathered by a business, and have a tighter rein on what users can do when it comes to computing?

Identity management could be just the ticket.

Think of it as a set of tools and technologies that let companies control the use of IT-enabled corporate programs or business processes, and determine what information and data can or cannot be viewed. It’s a system that acts like the gatekeeper, applying defined rules and policies regarding who should be doing what on the network, and then letting through those who have permission and keeping out those who don’t.

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ID management is a concept typically associated solely with IT security, and it’s why the big adopters have tended to be the companies that have to comply with legislation that requires close control, monitoring and logging of processes and business activities - big corporations and financial institutions, for instance.

But there’s much more to ID management that many people aren’t aware of, and even companies that aren’t so security-conscious ought to be thinking about it these days.

“It’s seen as a security tool rather than as a productivity tool,” according to David Senf, a research analyst with IDC Canada Ltd. in Toronto, who points out that ID management is really a collection of technologies that helps improve efficiency. “There are password resets and single sign-on as the typical technologies you’d consider as identity management. But one of the core components that often gets overlooked is user-account provisioning. That allows a business to take user-account activation and deactivation and integrate these into its business processes.”

Plus, the technology is a whole lot simpler to purchase, install and use these days, Mr. Senf says, making it easier for smaller organizations to adopt.

Inventure Solutions Inc., part of Vancity Group, a financial services company located in British Columbia, embarked on an identity-management project shortly after migrating from Windows NT to Windows 2003 about three years ago.

“We wanted to come up with something that was a single place to keep data about employees and keep it consistent – then use it for other things like single sign-on,” says Tony Fernandes, Inventure’s vice-president of IT operations. “We saw it as a huge efficiency benefit. [Without it,] you can end up duplicating coding in all types of systems to identify employees.”

Among the first and toughest steps was to think centrally and start gathering all human resources (HR) information into a single data repository. From there it’s fed out into other applications and systems by an ID management engine – in this case, Microsoft Corp.’s Identity Integration Server (MIIS) coupled with Active Directory software.


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Dan McLean Dan McLean 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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