Forum Discussion
outlook
- May 03, 2018
SSO stands for Single Sign On, sometimes is also used for "seamless" Single Sign on, meaning you can authenticate to O365 services without ever seeing a password prompt. To get this experience, you need to either have AD FS configured with O365 or use the new AAD Connect SSO: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/connect/active-directory-aadconnect-sso
we are using office 365
some form of sso?
SSO stands for Single Sign On, sometimes is also used for "seamless" Single Sign on, meaning you can authenticate to O365 services without ever seeing a password prompt. To get this experience, you need to either have AD FS configured with O365 or use the new AAD Connect SSO: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/connect/active-directory-aadconnect-sso
- Rising FlightMay 21, 2018Copper Contributor
Hi experts
which is the best solution to go with as i need to give my report to the management
ADFS configured with O365,
or
AAD connect SSO,
or
two factor authentication (I am not sure)
or
modern authentication(is modern authentication enabled by default)