What is Authentication ?
Authentication is the process of determining whether someone or something is, in fact, who or what it is declared to be. In private and public computer networks (including the Internet), authentication is commonly done through the use of logon passwords. Knowledge of the password is assumed to guarantee that the user is authentic. Each user registers initially (or is registered by someone else), using an assigned or self-declared password. On each subsequent use, the user must know and use the previously declared password. The weakness in this system for transactions that are significant (such as the exchange of money) is that passwords can often be stolen, accidentally revealed, or forgotten.
For this reason, Internet business and many other transactions require a more stringent authentication process. The use of digital certificates issued and verified by a Certificate Authority (CA) as part of a public key infrastructure is considered likely to become the standard way to perform authentication on the Internet.
Logically, authentication precedes authorization (although they may often seem to be combined).
| reference : | http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/sDefinition/ |
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The Bank of Thailand CA The Bank of Thailand |
NITMX CA National ITMX Company Limited |
PCC Digital ID CA Processing Center Company Limited |
CA hosted under the TDID infrastructure has been implemented by
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Standard CA Hardware from SafeNet |
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Standard CA Software from CyberTrust |
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| CA Operation certified ISO 27001:2005 | ![]() |




