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[InCommon] SafeNet


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  • From: Dean Woodbeck <>
  • To:
  • Subject: [InCommon] SafeNet
  • Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2012 13:47:26 -0400

SafeNet issued a press release this morning about offering PKI tokens and smart cards through InCommon. This program is now open and an order form is on the web (www.incommon.org/safenet).

Dean

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Dean Woodbeck
Program Manager, InCommon
(734) 352-7007
 

SafeNet and Internet2 to Secure Digital Identities for Universities 

Authentication Leader and Advanced Networking Consortium to Provide PKI Tokens & Smart Cards to Help Universities Secure and Access Information Across Multiple Platforms & Environments at Significant Cost Savings 

News Summary:
  • SafeNet and Internet2, through its InCommon trust services, have signed an agreement to offer smart cards and USB-format hard tokens for those interested in using Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) for enhanced privacy and security. 
  • SafeNet and Internet2 will provide a special discount to universities that will enable their faculty and students to secure and access information secured with PKI across multiple platforms and environments at a significant cost savings.
BALTIMORE and Ann Arbor, Mich. — July 31, 2012 — SafeNet, Inc., a global leader in data protection, and Internet2®, the world’s most advanced networking consortium, today announced they have entered into an agreement to offer SafeNet smart cards and PKI hard tokens for cryptographic storage of PKI credentials. 

As part of its multifactor authentication program, Internet2’s InCommon will offer SafeNet’s smart cards and PKI tokens to participating higher education organizations. These devices provide researchers, faculty, students and staff with secure, cryptographic storage of the client certificates that they may use to access campus-based and online resources secured with PKI, as well as allowing for S/MIME digital email signatures and email encryption. 

SafeNet will serve as one of the preferred vendors of security technology, providing InCommon participants with two-factor authentication devices that enable highly secure, certificate-based access to online and local network resources. Use of hard tokens or smart cards can be helpful if users are working on a shared machine in a campus computer lab or want to use the same cryptographic credentials on multiple devices, such as on a desktop at work and a laptop at home.

InCommon serves the U.S. education and research communities, supporting a common framework of trust, including the U.S. identity management trust federation for research and education, a community-driven Certificate Service, an Assurance Program for higher levels of trust, and a multifactor authentication program. 

The more than 400 InCommon participants include colleges, universities, research organizations, U.S. government agencies, and their sponsored partners. 

Executive Comments
 

“In today’s increasingly mobile environment, more students and researchers are accessing IT services and institutional information from a variety of devices and locations. At the same time, universities are under the gun to make certain that security is strong. Second-factor solutions are a proven approach to protecting the security of individual and university information,” said Jack Suess, chief information officer and vice president for information technology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and chair of the InCommon Steering Committee. “Our partnership with SafeNet provides the education community a proven multifactor authentication solution.”  

“As we continue to see an exponential growth of digital data assets, ensuring secure access becomes increasingly critical for security,” said Chen Arbel, Director of Business Development at SafeNet. “It is essential to make certain  that users are who they say they are and that they can only access what they have been authorized to access. We believe two-factor authentication, backed by PKI as the root of trust, is the best way to secure these digital assets. We are pleased to offer this program in conjunction with InCommon to help protect their participants’ digital assets, whether they reside in the enterprise or are accessed remotely.”  

Additional Resources:




  • [InCommon] SafeNet, Dean Woodbeck, 07/31/2012

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