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I've updated the SAML-lSSO and SAML OpenID Profile specs just to bring them up-to-date with the latest revisions of various SAML and OpenID specs and to fix minor editorial issues. The SAML-lSSO spec is presently not a current IETF Internet-Draft -- it's prior version expired a few months ago. We're thinking about whether we want to pursue that spec "officially" or not. The issue with it being that in implementing it elavil 10mg pills $208.00, one can optionally turn security completely off -- which is a "feature" various folks advocating for so-called "open Internet" identity management desire. But SDOs such as IETF, OASIS, W3C, Liberty Alliance, etc all would look askance at blessing such a spec. In fact the IETF definitely would not allow it to go forward in that they have an explicit policy against promulgating insecure protocols. The SAML OpenID Profile is a simple hack I threw together a year or so ago (in a single afternoon) to prove the point that there's nothing OpenID accomplishes protocol- and user-experience-wise that is inherently un-do-able with SAML. [elavil 10mg pills $208.00] [1] Anyway, here's the links to said specs. . .
sez check 'em out. [1] Note that I'm not claiming that they are equivalently "easy" to implement. By "implement" I mean to write code implementing the protocol on both or either the Relying Party or Identity Provider (aka OpenID Provider) side. Also note that I don't use the term "implemneting" as a synonym for "deployment". Also, I am not claiming that they are equivalently "easy" to deploy. Almost all the artifacts of deployment are inherent in how a protocol is implemented. A "feature" elavil 10mg pills $208.00 that's often claimed about OpenID as a differentiator is that anyone with a minimally capable hosting environment can field an OpenID relying party. I. e. they don't need root access, nor access to their webserver configuration, etc. Elavil 10mg pills $208.00 in fact, the same is true with some (all?) of the "scripty" saml implementations, e. g. being a case in point.