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Join Us at Burton Catalyst – One of the best Identity focused events of 2010

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

July 26, 2010

By Dieter Schuller, VP of Business Development

This year’s Burton Catalyst promises to be one of the best Identity focused events of 2010. I’ve been to every Catalyst Conference since it began, and I think that this year’s agenda—along with our hospitality suite!—are the most exciting ever.   Burton made it’s reputation in the identity area and now that they are part of Gartner, they have the resources and clout to really make this something special.  Gartner analysts are promising that this year’s event will be the best one ever held—and they’re backing that up with a 100% guarantee on your investment.

Great sessions highlighting Identity and Context Virtualization

This year, we are especially fortunate to have significant support from our customers, partners, and friends who come every year to learn what’s hot in IdM, get updates on products and upcoming releases, and celebrate with us in our suite. Many of our customers will be discussing their successful VDS use cases and deployments.

Don’t miss these sessions showcasing Identity and Context Virtualization:

The Emerging Identity Architecture
(Bob Blakley & Ian Glazer, Gartner/Burton Group)
Wednesday, July 28, 8:40 am

Manage globally, Act locally: How Identity & Context Virtualization Solved Complex Security and Data Integration Issues for Intel Corporation
(Steve Price, Intel Corporation)
Wednesday, July 28, 11:20 pm

Directory Services, Federation, and the Cloud
(Mark Diodati, Gartner/Burton Group)
Wednesday, July 28, 2:00 pm

The Industry Perspective on Cloud-Based Identity Challenges
(Industry Panel)
Wednesday, July 28, 2:35 pm

Leveraging Directory Services Virtualization to Integrate Identities for Enterprise Social Networking
(Ken Durazzo, Cisco Systems)
Wednesday, July 28, 3:10 pm

Backend Attribute Exchange: From Profile to Usage
(Anil John, Johns Hopkins University – APL)
Wednesday, July 28, 4:10 pm

Vendor Lightning Round 1
Wednesday, July 28, 5:05 pm

Join us for free drinks and free-ranging conversation—You could even win an iPad!

I’d like to invite you to visit our hospitality suite on Wednesday, July 28, 2010, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm on the Aqua Patio.

We’ll be serving up delicious fare and refreshing libations, all with beautiful ocean views and the chance to get updates on ID-Connect, our free social media interface offering user profile management, white pages, and enterprise-wide search capabilities. Plus, the first 300 attendees can register to win one of three iPads and several other prizes.

I’d love to discuss your IdM infrastructure and initiatives

Finally, if you are at Catalyst and would like to meet 1:1 with me for a drink or to discuss your latest IdM initiatives, please shoot me an email at dschuller@radiantlogic.com or call me at 630-810-1294.

Look forward to seeing you in San Diego.

Dieter

For more information, visit http://www.radiantlogic.com/main/ or download a 45-day free trial. Follow Radiant Logic on Twitter and on LinkedIn. Fan us on Facebook.

Upcoming Webinar: Virtualization’s Role in the Emerging Identity Landscape

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

By Elle Fredericks, Marketing Communications

In his recent paper, “The Emerging Architecture of Identity Management,” Gartner analyst Bob Blakely laid out a roadmap for a new identity management infrastructure. As a follow up, Bob will be joining Radiant Logic’s Dieter Schuller, Vice President of Sales and Business Development, for an upcoming webinar. The two will detail the new infrastructure as recommended by Gartner, and how Radiant Logic identity and context virtualization can help you implement it.

Needed: New Ways to Manage Identity

Over time, it has become increasingly difficult to build an integrated identity structure. As enterprises have added new audiences and acquired new companies, identities can no longer be managed the same way. What used to work—centralized authentication and authorization—no longer serves today’s far-flung, federated, and even cloud-based infrastructures.

The first challenge within such an evolving environment is to integrate identity and context for security and privacy. In order to do this, you need:

  1. A single view of identity through integration.
  2. A way to externalize security context (or any relevant context) out of existing data/application silos.
  3. The ability to join identity and context.
  4. And finally, the ability to scale in volume while providing the highest speed.

Until now, this has been an impossible task. But Bob and Dieter will give specifics on how these complex issues can be solved, and the answer is simple: Implement a virtual directory—but not just any virtual directory. You need a solution that will provide full support for an identity and context virtualization service.

Don’t Miss the Webinar!

Our upcoming webinar on July 17th at 8am PST will cover the new identity management infrastructure and the details for how to implement it within your unique identity environment.

Find out more:

You Don’t Want to Miss This One, Folks!

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

By Alex Rock, Radiant Logic Director of Marketing

At Radiant, we’ve known for some time that an overhaul of identity management architecture is required and it’s great to know we’re not alone.  Gartner VP and Research Director, Bob Blakely shares our opinion and has even laid out a roadmap for a new identity infrastructure in his latest research paper, The Emerging Architecture of Identity Management.” We couldn’t be more pleased that someone with such a respected voice—and a Gartner analyst no less!—is sharing the same story we’ve been telling for years.

The World of Identity is Changing—and Identity and Context Virtualization is Key

Your current identity management infrastructure is built for a world that no longer exists—one based on pushing identity from the center, instead of pulling it from many disparate sources. Today’s centralized identity infrastructure can’t keep up with tomorrow’s demands. Understanding this quandary is critical for you and the future of your enterprise.

Cloud computing, federation, and the need to scale are quickly changing the identity landscape and emphasizing the need for a transformation. Companies still struggling to solve today’s IdM challenges in their increasingly federated environments are now required to plan and account for tomorrow’s modern architectures, such as user-centric identity, Identity-as-a-service, and the cloud. Current enterprise IdM systems, designed to centralize management of the information used to authenticate employees and authorize their access to enterprise resources, simply won’t get us there.

According to Bob, the emerging identity infrastructure will be based on pulling identity from disparate sources at the time of use, and it will feature identity and context virtualization at its core—you’ve probably heard us talk about that a time or two! In addition to his recent paper, Bob also laid out his vision of a pull-based identity management architecture at Burton Catalyst EU in Prague at the end of June. Ian Glazer, also of Gartner, recapped it nicely in his blog.

Join us at Catalyst and Don’t Miss our Upcoming Webinar!

We’re gearing up for Catalyst North America in San Diego at the end of this month, where we will be showcasing some exciting new products. But before heading down to sun and surf, we invite you to join us for our next webinar on Thursday, July 15th at 8:00 a.m. PST, when Bob Blakely will expand on his groundbreaking research paper and Radiant’s Dieter Schuller will discuss Identity and Context Virtualization and give some tips on selecting this critical component of the new identity infrastructure.

Don’t miss this discussion on:

  • Why the current push model no longer works in today’s identity landscape.
  • How virtualization finally separates the production and storage of identities from their consumption.
  • How explicit context representation and externalization will drive finer-grained authorization and profile management—and change the way you relate to your customers.
  • How you can use smart virtualization to deliver identity and context as a service and create a complete IdM infrastructure for all your initiatives.

>> Sign up for the webinar

Learn more about Identity and Context Virtualization or catch us at Catalyst in San Diego for a demo of our new ID-Connect product.

Hope to see you there!

Get More from Your SharePoint Deployment with Identity and Context Virtualization: Go Beyond Documents and Connect to the Rest of the World

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

By Dieter Schuller, VP of Sales and Business Development

We all know that SharePoint is a great tool for sharing documents. Unfortunately, it doesn’t integrate easily with the rest of your enterprise, including non-Microsoft applications and data sources. And documents alone are not enough—to be really useful, your portal needs to bring together all your users and connect to all your applications.

The SharePoint integration challenge: Why it’s so difficult to connect with the rest of the world

In order to make SharePoint a truly collaborative tool, you need to extend access beyond your employee base, to customers, partners, and vendors. Unfortunately, all of these populations are stored within different data silos, each with their own schemas and protocols. Without a virtualization layer, it’s not easy to authenticate across diverse user bases or authorize the appropriate access to each resource.

Five ways Identity and Context Virtualization can help

  1. More Users, Less Hassle: SharePoint offers only a static definition of your user groups, so it’s difficult to add or manage new populations without spending a lot on custom coding. RadiantOne virtualization gives you a single logical view of all your users, without any overlap or duplications, so it’s easier to add populations and manage access to your portal.
  2. Powerfully Simple Security: Information about users is often scattered across different systems. RadiantOne lets you build a complete profile, bringing together all the attributes for each person, regardless of where or how they’re stored—so you can perform finer-grained authorization and enforce policies contextually.
  3. 360-degree Access to Data: SharePoint struggles when dealing with the structured data that’s found in your enterprise applications—especially when they’re not based on a Microsoft platform. RadiantOne lets you search across both your documents and your enterprise application stores so you can access everything, and see it all in context.
  4. Seamless User Experience: Instead of forcing the average user to master every system, RadiantOne offers a common interface that lets everyone search across systems, just like you’d search a term on the web. So your users have secure access to all the information they need, wherever they are.
  5. The Future’s Built In: RadiantOne can integrate attributes and contextual data from across your data silos, enabling a world of fine-grained, context-driven new services—all without making heavy investments in custom code or point solutions.

You need a better, more cost-effective way to integrate your entire enterprise. With RadiantOne Identity and Context Virtualization, you get the next-generation integration solution—so you can save money, add flexibility, and deliver a richer experience for all of your users.

Learn more about how Identity and Context Virtualization can supercharge your SharePoint deployment. Or catch us at TEC for a demo of our new SharePoint-powered social media interface.

Hope to see you there!

Scalability and Semantics

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Crawl, Walk, then Run on the Way to Identity and Context Virtualization

After I published my post on identity and context virtualization, Tom Kaczmarek posted an insightful comment in the IAM section on Linked-In—and in doing so, inspired this blogpost (I love the opportunity to riff on these topics, so Thanks, Tom!).

  1. His first question has to do with the scalability. “How does one make this sustainable as the number of local views increases?”
  2. His other issue is more fundamental and has to do with soundness of the approach: “A missing piece in the explanation of this framework is a strong semantic model (of the type AI researchers have developed) to act as the glue to bind the pieces.”

Question 1: Is it scalable?

As always, this is a key question. The whole idea is to build a hugely scalable and distributed infrastructure, which serves as the basis for the integration of multiple data sources (the “contextual” part of the story) linked to a potentially huge number of identities/actors (which can be humans or computers). This is a daunting task and as Tom emphasized, it needs to be sustainable as the number of local views increases.

Now, we know better than to try and invent a whole new philosopher’s stone. As Picasso said, “good artists copy, great artists steal.” So we borrowed a pattern that has proven its worth. In this case, we see this pattern working everyday for us; it’s the same one behind the Internet and DNS. The idea is to allow the local sources to publish their own views of the world and then link and aggregate this information as you go. So a local website exposes itself as an HTML document and then the different links and DNS ties up the whole system, turning it into what is now the Internet.  And in the same way, the virtualization and publication of structured data will enable a progressive integration of all data silos. Will that scale? Absolutely, in the same way that DNS scales.

Of course, the Internet was not born in a day, with a master plan to publish our worldview in a consistent way. Instead, it was built on this idea of providing the tools for a progressive, grassroots level of aggregation and linking of information. DNS is another example of grassroots aggregation/integration of name services based on zone files and a hierarchical structure.

In fact, think of DNS as being like all those hierarchical zone files, distributed around the world and served by multiple machines, but still able to resolve any name like “www.mycrazyworld.net” into an executable IP address. Push DNS one step further and you are transforming a simple name service into an object naming service—aka, a directory—then push it one step past that by linking related objects into sentences, and those sentences into relevant contexts. Now you’re reaching a world where your data silos are turned into a set of human readable contexts and sentences that can be searched using your favorite Google search box (or Bing box, to keep our friends from Redmond happy…).

This is what we mean by “manage globally, act locally.” Delegate the integration task to the owner of the data source—he knows his mess the best!—and let him publish the view of his data that he wants to share. Then provide a flexible layer to integrate those views in whatever way works for you. This uniform approach unlocks the data from its silo, while allowing a highly scalable and distributed architecture.

Question 2: Is it sound?

We just saw that by following a well-established technical pattern, we could publish, aggregate, and scale a huge amount of context and identity information. But scalability and ease of deployment are not guarantees of consistency or soundness. As you know, one of the main challenges when it comes to data integration is the fact that beyond matters of format or protocols, each data silo represents concepts, entities, and relationships differently. You could have homonymy (same words to designate different concepts), synonymy (different words to designate the same concepts), and everything in between.

The first and absolutely necessary step to support a real data service virtualization layer like RadiantOne is the translation of all local models to a “canonical common data model.” In fact, this is what differentiates us from any current “virtual directory” on the market. Unlike our competition, we try hard to understand your data, by creating a model for it. I won’t belabor the point, but you can learn more here. But Tom makes a good point when he says: “A missing piece in the explanation of this framework is a strong semantic model (of the type AI researchers have developed) to act as the glue to bind the pieces.”

In the semantic web space of logic, ontology/descriptive logics, and computational linguistics, there is a whole “conceptual” revolution cooking. Even today, there are wonderful tools in academia and elsewhere, designed to solve the category of problem Tom outlined in his comment: being sure that a new concept in the global model does not contradict your existing world, and being able to infer new consequences of action based on changes recorded in your data sources.

The problem with this semantic world is not the absence of tools, it is the absence of data. If all data was tagged as RDF and defined in Owl, then we’d have no trouble. The problem, of course, is jumpstarting the process. In many ways, the semantic world is in the same state as the original Internet, when academics began using protocols such as FTP, csh, Gopher, etc. to exchange info. Over time, this sea of info started to build up and when HTML and the web browser came along, suddenly the whole Internet was a tool for the rest of us.

I believe the same things will happen with our structured data, using new tools based on data service virtualization—like RadiantOne!—to unearth the data into readable contexts and sentences. While our transactions take up less than 10% of the volume, they represent at least 90 % of the commercial value. So having searchable, contextual access to this data across silos will be a very big deal, indeed.

But how do we get from here to there? As usual, first we crawl, then we walk, and then we run (or maybe even fly):

  1. Virtualize, so that you can publish and aggregate and reach information in a uniform way
  2. Then turn it into a format (RDF) where you can leverage semantic web  tools, such as ontologies and inference engines, to create and maintain consistency—as I keep saying, don’t reinvent the wheel, steal it.
  3. And finally, converge toward a newer, better, and more consistent system.

That will get you to a good brisk walk. As for running and flying, watch this space for more discussion. ;)

And thanks again, Tom, for your insightful comment. I’d love to discuss these topics with you further. Get in touch with me using the email address on the right.