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GIAC GPEN Exam - Topic 7 Question 16 Discussion

Actual exam question for GIAC's GPEN exam
Question #: 16
Topic #: 7
[All GPEN Questions]

Which of the following Web authentication techniques uses a single sign-on scheme?

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Suggested Answer: D

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Lyndia
4 months ago
I thought single sign-on was only for newer systems, interesting!
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Alex
4 months ago
Basic and Digest are definitely not single sign-on methods.
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Nana
4 months ago
Wait, isn't NTLM also used for single sign-on in some cases?
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Ardella
4 months ago
Totally agree, it simplifies the login process!
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Carrol
5 months ago
Microsoft Passport authentication is the one with single sign-on.
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Carey
5 months ago
I feel like I saw something about single sign-on in relation to Microsoft Passport, but I can't recall the details clearly.
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Bernardine
5 months ago
Basic and Digest authentication seem more like traditional methods, so I doubt they use single sign-on.
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Jordan
5 months ago
I remember practicing a question about NTLM, but I don't think it was related to single sign-on.
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Regenia
5 months ago
I think Microsoft Passport authentication is the one that uses single sign-on, but I'm not entirely sure.
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Mary
5 months ago
I’m a bit confused; I thought NTLM had some single sign-on features, but I could be mixing it up with something else.
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Fredric
5 months ago
Basic and Digest authentication seem more like traditional methods, so I’m leaning towards Microsoft Passport for single sign-on.
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Clare
5 months ago
I remember practicing a question about NTLM, but I don't think it was single sign-on.
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Freida
5 months ago
I think Microsoft Passport authentication is the one that uses single sign-on, but I'm not completely sure.
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Miles
5 months ago
Hmm, I'm not too familiar with the specific CLI commands for validating redundancy peers. I'll have to think this through carefully.
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Edward
5 months ago
I think I recall that using a /21 for the branches is essential to accommodate future devices, so maybe option D is worth considering?
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Meaghan
5 months ago
True, that's my guess. Cloud balancing requires on-demand scaling, not just redundant resources.
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