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29 items matching your search terms
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Learn More
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Learn more about the WiKID Strong Authentication System. Request White papers, watch demonstrations, see pricing for our Enterprise Two-factor Authentication ...
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WiKID: Save Big on your Total Cost of Ownership
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WiKID is significantly less expensive than hardware tokens. This table proves WiKID is 30-60% less expensive for as few as 100-250 users!
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Strong Authentication for the Internet Age
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Today, you need strong authentication not just for your users, but also potentially for customers, vendors, consultants, partners, etc. WiKID is the only ...
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WiKID's Self-service & Ease of Deployment capabilities
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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 ...
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Operational Benefits of WiKID Strong Authentication
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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. ...
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Relative Security of the WiKID Strong Authentication System
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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 ...
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Extensible Strong Authentication
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Unlike key fobs and other forms of "shared secret" strong authentication, WiKID Strong Authentication is extremely extensible and adaptable to today's ...
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Architecture Overview
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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. ...
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WiKID Strong Authentication Domains
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In WiKID a user is associated with a "Domain". The domain in turn points to a Network Client - completing the triangle.
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WiKID's Strong Authentication Software Token Device Client Support
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WiKID supports the broadest selection of operating systems in the industry. If you need Windows, Mac, Linux, J2ME, PocketPC/SmartPhone/Windows Mobile or ...
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WiKID Strong Authentication Network Clients
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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 ...
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WiKID Transaction Authentication
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Even with stronger session and mutual authentication, there is still a risk from session-hijacking trojans. Using WiKID for transaction authentication will ...
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WiKID Mutual Authentication
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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 ...
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What's new in 3.0
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Details of what is new in our 3.0 release of the WiKID Strong Authentication Server.
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What are WiKID "Domains"?
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How are users provisioned? How is initial validation handled?
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Can more than one passcode be valid at one time?
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What do I do when my wireless device is out of network coverage and I want to login with my WiKID credentials?
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Aren’t wireless networks and devices inherently insecure?
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How can a software token be as secure as a hardware token?
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Will WiKID Strong Authentication work in my network?
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Will the WiKID token run on a USB Token?
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Can WiKID work across multiple enterprises without federation?
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How scalable is the WiKID server?
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Can the WiKID Server and/or Token be embedded?
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What's the difference between the Community release and Enterprise release?
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Do you also offer a hardware token?
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What ports are needed for WiKID? How do I know if the listener running on the server?
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How do I know if my certificate is valid?
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