I have experience with Imprivata OneSign and Imprivata Confirm ID. For the past three and a half years, I've been using Imprivata OneSign 7.9 and Confirm ID 7.9 versions. The client I'm working with is Ascension, which is in the hospital-based industry, working with a chain of hospitals across the US. Currently, we are trying to enhance things and we have a plan for upgrading our Imprivata services to our end customers from 7.9 to the G4 version, which is the latest version out there for Imprivata services. The G4 23.7 is the latest version available. Currently, I'm working with Imprivata vendors for having our client systems upgraded to the Imprivata higher version for the G4s. We did use the multi-factor authentication feature across all the patients. Earlier, we relied on the MFA and the Vasco tokens. We had the Vasco tokens and we also had the True ID app. These are the two things that we have used for the multi-factor authentications for clinical patients. That is, if you are a provider and you are subjected to enroll in multi-factor authentication so that you can e-prescribe the control substances for the customers. We have used the self-service password reset feature. Some of the sites that we have licenses for the self-service password reset and we have used that feature for our end customers as well. I am using a mixed deployment model for Imprivata OneSign. We have some of the servers built on-prem and some of the servers built on the cloud. We have Azure as well. We have on-prem VMware vSphere and Hyper-V as well.
Single Sign-On (SSO) streamlines the authentication process, allowing users to access multiple applications with one set of credentials. Benefiting IT management, it reduces password fatigue and enhances security by centralizing the authentication framework.Organizations implementing SSO experience easier user management and improved security. It reduces the need for remembering numerous passwords, decreasing the risk of weak password usage and unauthorized access. This centralized system...
I have experience with Imprivata OneSign and Imprivata Confirm ID. For the past three and a half years, I've been using Imprivata OneSign 7.9 and Confirm ID 7.9 versions. The client I'm working with is Ascension, which is in the hospital-based industry, working with a chain of hospitals across the US. Currently, we are trying to enhance things and we have a plan for upgrading our Imprivata services to our end customers from 7.9 to the G4 version, which is the latest version out there for Imprivata services. The G4 23.7 is the latest version available. Currently, I'm working with Imprivata vendors for having our client systems upgraded to the Imprivata higher version for the G4s. We did use the multi-factor authentication feature across all the patients. Earlier, we relied on the MFA and the Vasco tokens. We had the Vasco tokens and we also had the True ID app. These are the two things that we have used for the multi-factor authentications for clinical patients. That is, if you are a provider and you are subjected to enroll in multi-factor authentication so that you can e-prescribe the control substances for the customers. We have used the self-service password reset feature. Some of the sites that we have licenses for the self-service password reset and we have used that feature for our end customers as well. I am using a mixed deployment model for Imprivata OneSign. We have some of the servers built on-prem and some of the servers built on the cloud. We have Azure as well. We have on-prem VMware vSphere and Hyper-V as well.
My use case for Imprivata OneSign is that it has helped customers minimize their work in remembering passwords and enhance their security.
We use Imprivata OneSign for the single sign-on.
We use one single ID for signing into more than fifty applications. We only need to use one ID.