tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4466865603389367352.post4224821500812590450..comments2024-02-24T12:54:08.896+01:00Comments on Bruggen Blog: How graphs revolutionize Identity and Access ManagementRikhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03690347549685761941noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4466865603389367352.post-78954092664395947472017-01-16T18:00:19.300+01:002017-01-16T18:00:19.300+01:00Hey Stefan
thanks for reaching out. Would love to...Hey Stefan<br /><br />thanks for reaching out. Would love to discuss - I still love the IAM space and do indeed think graphs would be a great fit to solve some of the long-standing issues with it. Maybe we could connect offline?<br /><br />Let me know.<br /><br />RikRikhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03690347549685761941noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4466865603389367352.post-52174859335417877342017-01-16T17:03:04.135+01:002017-01-16T17:03:04.135+01:00Hi Rik,
first of all this blog article, even it is...Hi Rik,<br />first of all this blog article, even it is an older one, made my day.<br />Why? I tell you what. We have got a similar professional history. I have worked a long time as technical consultant for Novell technologies. And started to do Identity Management in 2001.<br />And now I'm sitting here, responsible for an enterprise Identity Solution, being frustrated and don't know how to go forward.<br />The good thing is I now know what has to be done, but there still remain some questions.<br />For example what's about my provisioning engine I've used to populate (for example)the enterprise Active Directory. Shall I stick with it?<br />Would you use the Neo4j database to run authentication against it (via OpenID connect)?<br />I'm really interested to chat about these questions. Maybe you will drop me a line.<br />Cheers,<br />StefanAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04283813993923700988noreply@blogger.com