About: Login is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 15173 publications have been published within this topic receiving 115779 citations. The topic is also known as: log in & log on.
TL;DR: The authors concentrate on authentication for real-time, interactive services that are offered on computer networks, which includes remote login, file system reads and writes, and information retrieval for applications like Mosaic.
Abstract: When using authentication based on cryptography, an attacker listening to the network gains no information that would enable it to falsely claim another's identity. Kerberos is the most commonly used example of this type of authentication technology. The authors concentrate on authentication for real-time, interactive services that are offered on computer networks. They use the term real-time loosely to mean that a client process is waiting for a response to a query or command so that it can display the results to the user, or otherwise continue performing its intended function. This class of services includes remote login, file system reads and writes, and information retrieval for applications like Mosaic. >
TL;DR: The UNIX Model, a Practical Guide to Communication Protocols, and its Applications: A Network Primer, a Guide to Security and Performance, a guide to Performance, are reviewed.
Abstract: 1. Introduction. 2. The UNIX Model. 3. Interprocess Communication. 4. A Network Primer. 5. Communication Protocols. 6. Berkeley Sockets. 7. System V Transport Layer Interface. 8. Library Routines. 9. Security. 10. Time and Date Routines. 11. Ping Routines. 12. Trivial File Transfer Program. 13. Line Printer Spools. 14. Remote Command Execution. 15. Remote Login. 16. Remote Tape Drive Access. 17. Performance. 18. Remote Procedure Calls. Appendices.
TL;DR: It is concluded that many academic proposals to replace text passwords for general-purpose user authentication on the web have failed to gain traction because researchers rarely consider a sufficiently wide range of real-world constraints.
Abstract: We evaluate two decades of proposals to replace text passwords for general-purpose user authentication on the web using a broad set of twenty-five usability, deployability and security benefits that an ideal scheme might provide. The scope of proposals we survey is also extensive, including password management software, federated login protocols, graphical password schemes, cognitive authentication schemes, one-time passwords, hardware tokens, phone-aided schemes and biometrics. Our comprehensive approach leads to key insights about the difficulty of replacing passwords. Not only does no known scheme come close to providing all desired benefits: none even retains the full set of benefits that legacy passwords already provide. In particular, there is a wide range from schemes offering minor security benefits beyond legacy passwords, to those offering significant security benefits in return for being more costly to deploy or more difficult to use. We conclude that many academic proposals have failed to gain traction because researchers rarely consider a sufficiently wide range of real-world constraints. Beyond our analysis of current schemes, our framework provides an evaluation methodology and benchmark for future web authentication proposals.
TL;DR: In this paper, a method and system for enabling a CTI user to log in at any work station (11-13) in a network including ACD/telephone switch (41), CTI server, and application servers (31).
Abstract: A method and system for enabling a CTI user to log in at any work station (11-13) in a network including ACD/telephone switch (41), CTI server, and application servers (31), and utilize the system with the correct teleset, and also to transfer a CTI transaction or interaction to another CTI user.
TL;DR: A systematic literature review concerning the security and privacy of electronic health record (EHR) systems found 23 articles that used symmetric key and/or asymmetric key schemes and 13 articles that employed the pseudo anonymity technique in EHR systems.