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Oracle Access Management

Oracle Access Management

Overview

What is Oracle Access Management?

Oracle Access Management is a web access solution.

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Recent Reviews

My Review

10 out of 10
November 28, 2017
Incentivized
I used to use it in a financial loan service for Harley Davidson Motorcycles. It was the actual account information for the customer's …
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Awards

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Product Details

What is Oracle Access Management?

Oracle Access Management aims to provide innovative new services that complement traditional access management capabilities. It not only provides Web SSO with MFA, coarse grained authorization and session management but also provides standard SAML Federation and OAuth capabilities to enable secure access to external cloud and mobile applications. It can be integrated with the Oracle Identity Cloud Service to support hybrid access management capabilities that can help customers to seamlessly protect on-premise and cloud applications and workloads.

Oracle Access Management Competitors

Oracle Access Management Technical Details

Operating SystemsUnspecified
Mobile ApplicationNo

Frequently Asked Questions

Oracle Access Management is a web access solution.

Netwrix Auditor are common alternatives for Oracle Access Management.

The most common users of Oracle Access Management are from Enterprises (1,001+ employees).
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Comparisons

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Reviews and Ratings

(336)

Attribute Ratings

Reviews

(1-5 of 5)
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Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
I was using Oracle Access Management at the previous company I worked for, and it was a very secure way to share access and prevent fraud, it can detect high-risk activities based on device, location, and behavior which is really important to keep the company data secure.
  • Two-step authentication.
  • Easily share access.
  • Advanced fraud detection.
  • A bit pricey but worth it.
Oracle Access Manager is a very important tool for network administrators whose job is to make sure that the company data is safe. The single sign-on capabilities allow for a better user experience across multiple applications while keeping the credentials hard to hack.
  • Securely storing credentials and preventing unauthorized access is priceless.
I am currently using OneLogin at my current company and it's just as good as Oracle access management.
Lane Cox | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Oracle Access Management is being utilized across the whole organization to offer enterprise access control across on-premises and cloud applications. Single sign-on capability on this software allows team to simplify access without having to remember the logins. Security feature is another great aspect that enhances data governance.
  • Multi-factor authentication on company applications and services enables that data is not accessed by third-party users. MFA is available in multiple methods such as TOTP, SMS and email authentication.
  • By increasing login requirements reduces risks for users based on location, devices and behavior of the user when access is suspected to be high-risk.
  • By accessing company data from company on-premises and cloud applications, we are able to save time, which improves productivity.
  • The cost is a bit expensive for small and mid-sized companies.
  • Changing master password doesn’t apply automatically in all third-party services and applications.
Oracle Access Management best suits all scenarios in any organization where IT applications and services are used. However, I would recommend business users in small and mid-sized companies to look for an alternative since the subscription cost can be extremely high. It’s okay for enterprise corporations to implement this, since it will help them access interlinked data from multiple on-premises and cloud applications in one tool.
  • Login validation eradicates cases of cyber attacks.
  • Accessing data in one single location from multiple repositories through SSO reduces technical procedures.
  • Two-step authentication is a great tool that ensures only the right business users are accessing our information.
Both these web access management tools are great. However, from my point of view, IBM Tivoli Federated Identity Manager is hard to use due to its complicated UI compared to Oracle Access Management.
Score 6 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
We are using OAM to create our IAM for all external users. Currently, two agencies inside Minnesota are using it, and the plan is to implement the solution across all agencies. Single sign-on through one place for user authentication and validation will resolve multiple login architectures.
  • Authentication- It does help our users get authenticated, provisioning our back end systems.
  • Validation - We can validate the login using OAM via our individual business solutions.
  • Two-step authentication - We use a PIN number as part of the two-step authentication process.
  • Authentication and validation need performance tuning.
  • OAM connects well with Oracle Database but doesn't work smoothly with Microsoft AD.
  • OAM releases are not straightforward for version upgrades.
It's great if you're wanting single sign-on, where you want to authenticate the user and grant the user appropriate access. I would say OAM does a good job in that case. Syncing with Microsoft AD is where I have seen it struggling, and provisioning through multiple application layers is also where it slows down the process.
  • It is ongoing, but so far the vendor we are working with is doing okay.
  • Infrastructure implementation was easy from Oracle.
  • Upgrade of OAM is where we are struggling, and security is always a concern.
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
My university being primarily an Oracle shop decided to go with Oracle Access Management to handle single sign-on and session management across multiple online applications. Different applications are accessed via Oracle Access Manager by students, faculty members and staff combined. OAM is useful in role-based provisioning and controls.
  • Oracle Access Management allows superior session management capabilities. It can maintain and terminate session states using access engine and endpoint cookies or security tokens.
  • It allows for automated single sign-on as well as protocol translation.
  • The suite allows for real-time fraud detection and prevention capabilities. This is especially useful where our applications are accessed by tens of thousands of users simultaneously.
  • One of the reasons we decided to move forward with Oracle's Access Manager was that we had already bought into their ecosystems and integration was not going to be an extensive a challenge. However, for a standalone product, the price can be fairly prohibitive.
  • Oracle general release cycles are fairly long. It can be a long wait sometimes for the patches to be released.
Oracle Access Manager is a fairly handy tool for network and privacy administrators. Its single sign-on capabilities allow for a better user experience across multiple applications. OAM can be customized by administrators to work with different two-factor authentication service providers like DUO or OneLogin.
  • Being an Enterprise Oracle client our university was able to leverage additional licenses at a highly subsidized rate. Hence we found a great use for the product without incurring too many overhead expenses apart from initial implementation costs.
Atlassian Confluence, Oracle Application Testing Suite, Oracle Service Bus, Google Analytics, Google Compute Engine, Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), Amazon Web Services, Salesforce App Cloud, Salesforce Communities
Score 4 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Oracle Access Management was originally used among 3 of the administrative staff members. Eventually, it was expanded out throughout the company as well as to our two satellite locations. It was primarily used to save passwords and additional login conditionals in one single place whether it be for desktop or mobile use. At the time, we were concerned about security and various security type breaches.
  • Real time updates and updating
  • Centralized authentication
  • Web Applications as well as mobile devices
  • Worked for a wide range of systems
  • The interface can be tricky or confusing
  • It lacks helpful intuitive tutorials and walkthroughs (lots of figuring out on your own)
  • The product can be pricey for small businesses
  • Software was sometimes very buggy
  • Creating your own scripts and templates is quite challenging
  • Tech Support was not at all helpful aside from simple set up
We have employees consistently logging into various websites and programs, and for those applications, it's pretty good, especially if you use various unique passwords. If you re-use or recycle the same passwords over and over and don't update and change passwords on a fairly often basis, this program is likely not for you. It's pretty good at housing access credentials, but beyond that, this software doesn't offer much else to assist with the normal workflow.
  • Set up took a while
  • Having credentials stored in a smiple avenue was great
  • The software would sometimes crash or freeze causing a loss in valuable time
  • Other software would likely be better priced and designed for the long haul
We've yet to see how Oracle Access Management stacks up against other software, though in the near future it is part of the plan. We decided to give Oracle Access Management a shot because we heard great things about it. We often change passwords and have unique passwords for every type of login credential needed. So to have a single piece of software that intertwined well was a huge benefit. But in the end, it caused more trouble than help.
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