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Context | IAM |
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Title | A General Inventory of Empirical Identities |
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Version | 1.1
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colour | Yellow |
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title | The inventory is very incomplete but the methodology is ok |
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Summary | There are several loosely defined or implied typologies or taxonomies of identities in the literature. In order to facilitate the construction of taxonomies, it is necessary to establish first an inventory of empirical entities from which to build the taxonomy. The objective of this section is to build such an inventory. |
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See Also | |
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TODO | - Enrich the inventory with a majority of Windows “well-known” identities
- Enrich the inventory with Linux equivalent
- Enrich the inventory with “exotic” cases such as BIOS credentials, certificates, etc.
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A taxonomy (Taxonomy (Dictionary Entry)) is defined by bailey (Bailey, 1994) as a classification of empirical (observable) entities. In that it is distinct, if not the opposite of a typology that is a classification of concepts (c.f.: Typology (Dictionary Entry)).
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To privilege concision and readability, definitions are provided via as link to dictionary entries under the References column.
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