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Folder Learn More
Learn more about the WiKID Strong Authentication System. Request White papers, watch demonstrations, see pricing for our Enterprise Two-factor Authentication ...
Page WiKID: Save Big on your Total Cost of Ownership
WiKID is significantly less expensive than hardware tokens. This table proves WiKID is 30-60% less expensive for as few as 100-250 users!
Page Strong Authentication for the Internet Age
Today, you need strong authentication not just for your users, but also potentially for customers, vendors, consultants, partners, etc. WiKID is the only ...
Page WiKID's Self-service & Ease of Deployment capabilities
WiKID Systems is devoted to reducing costs while increasing security. The best way to reduce cost in a corporate environment is to minimize the time and ...
Page Operational Benefits of WiKID Strong Authentication
One of the reasons why two-factor authentication has failed to deeply penetrate the authentication market is due to the operational hassles of hardware tokens. ...
Page Relative Security of the WiKID Strong Authentication System
There are many flavors of two-factor authentication, some more secure than others. We believe that relative security is a central factor in choosing a strong ...
Page Extensible Strong Authentication
Unlike key fobs and other forms of "shared secret" strong authentication, WiKID Strong Authentication is extremely extensible and adaptable to today's ...
Page Architecture Overview
Fundamentally, WiKID Strong Authentication works this way: A user selects the domain they wish to use and enters the PIN into their WiKID Two-factor client. ...
Page WiKID Strong Authentication Domains
In WiKID a user is associated with a "Domain". The domain in turn points to a Network Client - completing the triangle.
Page WiKID's Strong Authentication Software Token Device Client Support
WiKID supports the broadest selection of operating systems in the industry. If you need Windows, Mac, Linux, J2ME, PocketPC/SmartPhone/Windows Mobile or ...
Page WiKID Strong Authentication Network Clients
Network Clients can be network services such as VPNs or SSH or another server which proxies the authentication request to the WiKID Server such as a RADIUS ...
Page WiKID Transaction Authentication
Even with stronger session and mutual authentication, there is still a risk from session-hijacking trojans. Using WiKID for transaction authentication will ...
Page WiKID Mutual Authentication
Typical one-time passwords systems are susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. WiKID combines one-time passcodes and site authentication in our PC clients ...
Page What's new in 3.0
Details of what is new in our 3.0 release of the WiKID Strong Authentication Server.
FAQ What are WiKID "Domains"?
FAQ How are users provisioned? How is initial validation handled?
FAQ Can more than one passcode be valid at one time?
FAQ What do I do when my wireless device is out of network coverage and I want to login with my WiKID credentials?
FAQ Aren’t wireless networks and devices inherently insecure?
FAQ How can a software token be as secure as a hardware token?
FAQ Will WiKID Strong Authentication work in my network?
FAQ Will the WiKID token run on a USB Token?
FAQ Can WiKID work across multiple enterprises without federation?
FAQ How scalable is the WiKID server?
FAQ Can the WiKID Server and/or Token be embedded?
FAQ What's the difference between the Community release and Enterprise release?
FAQ Do you also offer a hardware token?
FAQ What ports are needed for WiKID? How do I know if the listener running on the server?
FAQ How do I know if my certificate is valid?