Initiative for Open Authentication
Initiative for Open Authentication (OATH) is an industry-wide collaboration to develop an open reference architecture using open standards to promote the adoption of strong authentication. It has close to thirty coordinating and contributing members and is proposing standards for a variety of authentication technologies, with the aim of lowering costs and simplifying their functions.
Terminology
The name OATH is an acronym from the phrase "open authentication", and is pronounced as the English word "oath".[1]
OATH is not related to OAuth, an open standard for authorization.
gollark: I forgot the exact numbers but I'm pretty sure reprocessing exists now and is used fine in France, and extraction from seawater is technically possible.
gollark: It isn't that big, go bury it somewhere. Unlike fossil plant output it is trivially containable.
gollark: The problem with coal isn't supply but horrible pollution issues. Which nuclear lacks.
gollark: More than thousands of years of supply exist IIRC. It is not a problem.
gollark: Actually, those are just tiny helium capsules.
See also
References
- "Pronunciation and Capitalization". Google Groups. Archived from the original on 14 November 2016. Retrieved 24 August 2016.
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