privileged access - определение. Что такое privileged access
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Что (кто) такое privileged access - определение

FRAMEWORK OF POLICIES AND TECHNOLOGIES FOR ENSURING THAT THE PROPER PEOPLE IN AN ENTERPRISE HAVE THE APPROPRIATE ACCESS TO TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES
Identity and access management; Access and Identity Management; Identity Mangement; Identity Management; I&AM; Identity access management; Identity and Access Management; Privileged identity management; IdM; Identity-management system; ID management; Identity management systems; Identity intelligence; Identity system; Identity Access Management; Privileged Identity Management; IdAM; Identity management system; Privileged account management; Privileged access management
  • Identity conceptual view
Найдено результатов: 1184
Epistemic privilege         
PHILOSOPHICAL CONCEPT THAT A SUBJECT AS PRIVILEGED ACCESS TO THEIR OWN THOUGHTS
Priviledged access; Privileged access
Epistemic privilege or privileged access is the philosophical concept that certain knowledge, such as knowledge of one's own thoughts, can be apprehended by a given person and not by others. This implies one has access to, and direct self-knowledge of, their own thoughts in such a way that others do not.
MTPAS         
CELLULAR TECHNOLOGY
Mobile Telecommunication Privileged Access Scheme
MTPAS (Mobile Telecommunication Privileged Access Scheme) is a British procedure for prioritising access to the mobile telephone networks for privileged persons (members of emergency services as designated at a local level). It replaced ACCOLC in 2009.
Privilege (evidence)         
LEGAL RIGHT OR DUTY TO REFUSE DISCLOSURE OF EVIDENCE
Privileged communication; Privileged Communication
In the law of evidence, a privilege is a rule of evidence that allows the holder of the privilege to refuse to disclose information or provide evidence about a certain subject or to bar such evidence from being disclosed or used in a judicial or other proceeding.
privileged communication         
LEGAL RIGHT OR DUTY TO REFUSE DISCLOSURE OF EVIDENCE
Privileged communication; Privileged Communication
n. statements and conversations made under circumstances of assured confidentiality which must not be disclosed in court. These include communications between husband and wife, attorney and client, physician or therapist and patient, and minister or priest with anyone seeing them in their religious status. In some states the privilege is extended to reporters and informants. Thus, such people cannot be forced to testify or reveal the conversations to law enforcement or courts, even under threat of contempt of court, and if one should break the confidentiality he/she can be sued by the person who had confidence in him/her. The reason for the privilege is to allow people to speak with candor to spouse or professional counsellor, even though it may hinder a criminal prosecution. The extreme case is when a priest hears an admission of murder or other serious crime in the confessional and can do nothing about it. The privilege may be lost if the one who made the admission waives the privilege, or, in the case of an attorney, if the client sues the attorney claiming negligence in conduct of the case. See also: attorney-client privilege
Random access         
ABILITY TO ACCESS AN ARBITRARY ELEMENT OF A SEQUENCE IN EQUAL TIME
Random-access storage; Random access file; Random-access; Random I/O; Random read; Random write; Direct access (computing)
Random access (more precisely and more generally called direct access) is the ability to access an arbitrary element of a sequence in equal time or any datum from a population of addressable elements roughly as easily and efficiently as any other, no matter how many elements may be in the set. In computer science it is typically contrasted to sequential access which requires data to be retrieved in the order it was stored.
random access         
ABILITY TO ACCESS AN ARBITRARY ELEMENT OF A SEQUENCE IN EQUAL TIME
Random-access storage; Random access file; Random-access; Random I/O; Random read; Random write; Direct access (computing)
¦ noun Computing the process of transferring information to or from memory in which every memory location can be accessed directly rather than being accessed in a fixed sequence.
Open access         
  • Article processing charges by gold OA journals in DOAJ<ref name="Khing Phyo San"/>
  • website=doaj.org}}</ref>
  • website=www.elsevier.com}}</ref>
  • link=File:Gold vs green OA at individual universities by year.webm
  • NIH]] Director [[Francis Collins]] and inventor [[Jack Andraka]]
  • thumb
  • OA-Plot
  • issn=2610-3540}}</ref>
  • Authors may use form language like this to request an open access license when submitting their work to a publisher.
  • pmid=18669565}}</ref> PDF downloads (n=3),<ref name=":12" /><ref name=":13" /><ref name=":14" /> Twitter (n=2),<ref name=":6"/><ref name=":10"/> Wikipedia (n=1)<ref name=":6" />
  • ''PhD Comics'']] introduction to open access
  • published]]) with open access sharing rights per [[SHERPA/RoMEO]]
  • alt=
  • access-date=21 May 2019}}</ref>
  • A fictional thank you note from the future to contemporary researchers for sharing their research openly
FREE DISTRIBUTION OF KNOWLEDGE
Open-access publishing; Open Access movement; Open Access; Open access journal; Open access publisher; Open access journals; OA journal; Open-access; Open journal; Golden road to open access; Open access movement; Open access publishing; Free journals; Gold OA; Gold Open Access; Open Access journal; Gold open access; Open Access (publishing); Open access (publishing); Free online access; Free online scholarship; Free Online Scholarship; Open Access publishing; Open access publication; Open-access (publishing); Open access academic journals; Open-access journal; OA publishing; Author-pays model; Platinum open access; Libre Open Access; Open Access Journal; Open-Access; Open access article; Openly publishing; Openly publish; Diamond open access journal; Open access press; Fee-based open-access journals; Open-access publishers; Open-access publisher; Platinum open-access; FAIR open access; Black open access; Black OA; Gratis open access; Publicly accessible; Open-access journals; Open-access movement
Open access (OA) is a set of principles and a range of practices through which research outputs are distributed online, free of access charges or other barriers. With open access strictly defined (according to the 2001 definition), or libre open access, barriers to copying or reuse are also reduced or removed by applying an open license for copyright.
Microsoft Access         
  • The logo for Access from 2013 to 2019
  • Office XP]]
DATABASE MANAGER THAT IS PART OF THE MICROSOFT OFFICE PACKAGE
Microsoft Access Development; MS Access; Microsoft access; Ms access; Ms Access; MS access; Access 97; MSACCESS; Microsoft Office Access; .mdb; Msaccess.exe; Office Access; .mde; Microsoft Access 2002; Access 2002; Access 2; Accdb; .accdb; Microsoft Acces; Microsoft Access 2007; Access 97 SR2; MSAccess; .accdr; .accdt; .accda; .accde; .laccdb
1. <database> A relational database running under {Microsoft Windows}. Data is stored as a number of "tables", e.g. "Stock". Each table consists of a number of "records" (e.g. for different items) and each record contains a number of "fields", e.g. "Product code", "Supplier", "Quantity in stock". Access allows the user to create "forms" and "reports". A form shows one record in a user-designed format and allows the user to step through records one at a time. A report shows selected records in a user-designed format, possibly grouped into sections with different kinds of total (including sum, minimum, maximum, average). There are also facilities to use links ("joins") between tables which share a common field and to filter records according to certain criteria or search for particular field values. Version: 2 (date?). Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.databases.ms-access. 2. <communications> A communications program from Microsoft, meant to compete with ProComm and other programs. It sucked and was dropped. Years later they reused the name for their database. [Date?] (1997-07-20)
Open-access mandate         
  • Mandates triple self-archiving rates
POLICY REQUIRING OR RECOMMENDING OPEN ACCESS TO SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS
Open Access mandate; Open-Access mandate; Open access mandates; Open access mandate; Open-access policy; Open access policy; Eprint button; Open-access policies; Rights-retention open access policy
An open-access mandate is a policy adopted by a research institution, research funder, or government which requires or recommends researchers—usually university faculty or research staff and/or research grant recipients—to make their published, peer-reviewed journal articles and conference papers open access (1) by self-archiving their final, peer-reviewed drafts in a freely accessible institutional repository or disciplinary repository ("Green OA") or (2) by publishing them in an open-access journal ("Gold OA") or both.
MS Access         
  • The logo for Access from 2013 to 2019
  • Office XP]]
DATABASE MANAGER THAT IS PART OF THE MICROSOFT OFFICE PACKAGE
Microsoft Access Development; MS Access; Microsoft access; Ms access; Ms Access; MS access; Access 97; MSACCESS; Microsoft Office Access; .mdb; Msaccess.exe; Office Access; .mde; Microsoft Access 2002; Access 2002; Access 2; Accdb; .accdb; Microsoft Acces; Microsoft Access 2007; Access 97 SR2; MSAccess; .accdr; .accdt; .accda; .accde; .laccdb

Википедия

Identity management

Identity management (IdM), also known as identity and access management (IAM or IdAM), is a framework of policies and technologies to ensure that the right users (that are part of the ecosystem connected to or within an enterprise) have the appropriate access to technology resources. IdM systems fall under the overarching umbrellas of IT security and data management. Identity and access management systems not only identify, authenticate, and control access for individuals who will be utilizing IT resources but also the hardware and applications employees need to access.

IdM addresses the need to ensure appropriate access to resources across increasingly heterogeneous technology environments and to meet increasingly rigorous compliance requirements.

The terms "identity management" (IdM) and "identity and access management" are used interchangeably in the area of identity access management.

Identity-management systems, products, applications and platforms manage identifying and ancillary data about entities that include individuals, computer-related hardware, and software applications.

IdM covers issues such as how users gain an identity, the roles, and sometimes the permissions that identity grants, the protection of that identity, and the technologies supporting that protection (e.g., network protocols, digital certificates, passwords, etc.).