Hi James
In the examples I was wanting to demonstrate that the Hospital would
not issue a claim that the surgeon is part of the team unless the
Hospital was presented with a valid claim from the College of
physicians and surgeons that the surgeon is still a surgeon.
In your example are y
Attempting to figure out to model deeper authorizations that aren't based
solely on the identity and require additional information. In your first
example, it didn't take into consideration what the individual can do, only
that they had different identities which needed to be correlated.
-O
On 25-Jan-07, at 1:36 PM, McGovern, James F ((HTSC, IT)) wrote:
Modify your scenario as follows:
- Tthe College of Physicians and Surgeons says she is a surgeon and
is board certified for X number of procedures
- A particular hospital says she is part of their team. Likewise,
they also kno
Modify your scenario as follows:
- Tthe College of Physicians and Surgeons says she is a surgeon and is board
certified for X number of procedures
- A particular hospital says she is part of their team. Likewise, they also
know that she plays different roles at other hospitals. Minimally we wan
Since your list is long, I'm only going to address things I have an
answer to. I'll leave the rest to other people. :)
Claus Färber wrote:
> -
> | 4.1.1. Key-Value Form Encoding
> |
> | A message in Key-Value form is a sequence of lines. Each line begins
> | with a key, followed by a colon,
Dick Hardt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb/wrote:
> Are there any more issues with this specification:
> http://openid.net/specs/openid-authentication-2_0-11.html
> Can we make this final?
Ok, here are the problems I found during a quick review:
-
| 4.1.1. Key-Value Form Encoding
|
| A me