1:00-2:15 | Building Blocks for Access Management: Setting the Stage
Do you have a set of rules or policies that are used to determine who gets access to your resources? If not, this session will highlight the steps you might go through with campus stakeholders, to analyze your existing environment and plan for automated provisioning of access.
Note that the afternoon sessions in this track are connected, in terms of topics.
Rob Carter, IdM and Middleware Architect, Duke University Keith Hazelton, Senior IT Architect, University of Wisconsin-Madison
| Identity Assurance Profiles (IAP): InCommon Bronze and Silver
Federated Service Providers (SPs) and their applications have varying degrees of risk and the ability/willingness to absorb that risk. Silver and Bronze are the InCommon Identity Assurance Profiles (IAP) that provide a higher degree of trust based on Identity Provider processes, policies, and technologies. This session will discuss the current InCommon IAP Program, changes to the identity assurance IAP and Identity Assurance Assessment Framework (IAAF) documents and important drivers for the adoption of IAPs.
John Krienke, Chief Operating Officer, InCommon Renee Shuey, Principal Lead, Identity and Access Management, Penn State Jacob Farmer, Lead Systems Analyst and Programmer, IdM Group, Indiana University
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2:30-3:45 | Building Blocks for Access Management: Provisioning
Ever dream of having all your campus services provisioned automatically? Hear some of the benefits and ramifications of implementing various solutions as case studies from "Self-Service Menus" to Group and Role-based service provisioning are presented.
Jacob Farmer, Lead Systems Analyst and Programmer, Identity Management Systems Group, Indiana University
| Federation Experiences: Service Provider
Have trouble knowing what attributes you can request from identity providers? Challenges for Service Providers in a federated environment can be much different than those experienced by Identity Providers. This session will include case studies from InCommon Service Providers sharing their experience with leveraging identity provider attributes, seamless integration of current and future services and managing multiple federations.
Debbie Bucci, Integration Services, Center for Information Technology, National Institutes of Health Jim Basney, Sr. Research Scientist, National Center for Supercomputing Applications Sebastian Korner, University of Michigan/Hathi Trust Moderator: John Krienke, Chief Operating Officer, InCommon
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4:00-5:15 | Building Blocks for Access Management: Groups, Roles, Privileges
This session presents case studies of managing the information associated with access using groups, roles and privileges. The challenge of centralized versus distributed access management is covered as well as an overview of the Grouper Groups Management Toolkit.
Tom Barton, Senior Director for Architecture, Integration and CISO, University of Chicago
| Want to Federate? What's Next for Your Consortium?
Think your consortium might benefit from federated identity and want to learn what it takes? Be sure to attend this session. A federation is a collaborative group of organizations, such as a health care network or a state education consortium, which agree to interoperate using a common set of rules about identity, privacy, and security. Using case studies of successful collaboration examples, we’ll examine readiness indicators, requirements, specific benefits of federated identity, as well as best practices on how to get collaborating.
Don Hamparian, Senior Product Manager, Identity Management, OCLC Matt Kolb, Assistant Director, Computing Services, Academic Technology Services, Michigan State University Mark Rank, Middleware Architect, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Mark Scheible, MCNC Moderator: Mark Beadles, Program Manager, Federated Identity, OARnet
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