to get corporate email addresses.
any publicly traded company has to meet reporting guidelines, part o which is a listing of employees.
so the public list of staff names and the company name and take the first initial and last name for email address and login.
or whole first name and last name.
those are the two most common login name schemes used.
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must disclose the names of all employees? That could be a list of 20,000+ names for some firms and it changes every day.
AFAIK, in reports to the SEC, corporations must disclose the names of the corporation's officers, which customarily (and by laws, too) include the President, Vice-President(s), Secretary, and Treasurer of the corporation. Law or regulations probably require them to disclose who is in such positions of responsibility as the "CEO" and "CFO" if not also the "CTO". In each arcronymn, the "O" stands for "officer".
AFAIK, in reports to the SEC, corporations must disclose the names of the corporation's officers, which customarily (and by laws, too) include the President, Vice-President(s), Secretary, and Treasurer of the corporation. Law or regulations probably require them to disclose who is in such positions of responsibility as the "CEO" and "CFO" if not also the "CTO". In each arcronymn, the "O" stands for "officer".
Like, asking both a user Id, a password and a "domain name" type Id... even if they're all of 6 chars that'd mean a lot of space cover...
Actually, I'm still looking for a way to set a default domain for Windows logins. When I'm in as local admin, I have to log out and back in as domain admin so that when the user returns, the domain doesn't block or confuse them by showing the machine name instead.
Anyhow, in the case of Windows, your already entering a uname/pword/domain. Thinks like Cisco gateways that tap into MS-LDAP also ask for all three. In the end, I don't know if it provides a third dimension for calculations with any benefit over two though.
My initial thinking would be that your better to look for dual authentication at that point. Unless the domain specifies a seporate area of the same machine (eg. egroupware supporting more than one domain), you may not be adding much to what is still a single authentication login. Granted, somethignyouhave and somethignyouare become complicated where websites are concerned.
Anyhow, in the case of Windows, your already entering a uname/pword/domain. Thinks like Cisco gateways that tap into MS-LDAP also ask for all three. In the end, I don't know if it provides a third dimension for calculations with any benefit over two though.
My initial thinking would be that your better to look for dual authentication at that point. Unless the domain specifies a seporate area of the same machine (eg. egroupware supporting more than one domain), you may not be adding much to what is still a single authentication login. Granted, somethignyouhave and somethignyouare become complicated where websites are concerned.
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