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Identity Open Source Projects

Bandit Project

[http://www.bandit-project.org]

Bandit is a system of loosely-coupled components that provide consistent identity services and creates a community that organizes and standardizes identity-related technologies in an open way, promoting both interoperability and collaboration. The Bandit project was founded by Novell.

OpenSAML

[http://www.opensaml.org/]

OpenSAML 1.1 is an open source toolkit for implementing solutions using the SAML 1.1 and 1.0 specifications. It is a production quality release available for Java (1.4+) and C++ applications. OpenSAML 2.0 is in development, and will include support for the SAML 2.0 standard, as well as legacy support for SAML 1.1 and 1.0. The redesigned library includes a superset of the functionality in earlier versions, but will NOT be API-compatible with them.

OpenSSO

[https://opensso.dev.java.net/]

The Open Web SSO project (OpenSSO) provides core identity services to simplify the implementation of transparent single sign-on (SSO) as a security component in a network infrastructure. OpenSSO provides the foundation for integrating diverse web applications that might typically operate against a disparate set of identity repositories and are hosted on a variety of platforms such as web and application servers. This project is based on the code base of Sun JavaTM System Access Manager, a core identity infrastructure product offered by Sun Microsystems.

Project ArisId

[http://www.openliberty.org/wiki/index.php/ProjectAris]

The ArisID API implements the CARML (Client Attribute Requirements Markup Language) and Privacy Constraints IGF specifications Liberty Alliance released earlier this year. ArisID demonstrates how CARML and Privacy Constraints policies may be used by developers to create declarative identity applications. The open source ArisID declarative approach defines what identity-enabled transactions can be performed to ensure applications only use identity information required to complete a transaction. This allows developers to build secure identity-enabled enterprise applications that are easily auditable and protect the personally identifiable information (PII), such as a social security number or credit information, of people engaging in enterprise identity-enabled transactions.

VELO (Safehaus)

[http://docs.safehaus.org/display/VELO/Home]

VELO is an Open Source Identity and Access Provisioning server.

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