- Source: Personal access token
In computing, a personal access token (or PAT) is a string of characters that can be used to authenticate a user when accessing a computer system instead of the usual password. Though associated with a single account, multiple PATs may be created, and can be manipulated independently of the password associated with that account, including creation and revocation of PATs without altering the password. The PAT is usually generated automatically by the remote system — for example, as a string of 52 alphanumeric characters. Typically, permissions may also be adjusted for each PAT individually, allowing or restricting access to certain classes of data or functions on the remote system. These permissions can usually be adjusted only after authenticating with the password. This can be a useful form of delegation of authorization, for example, when creating programs that will access the remote system. The PAT will typically be stored in a location accessible to the program, and therefore not typically as secure as a password. If the program or PAT is compromised, the damage will be limited by the permissions available to that PAT, and the PAT itself can easily be revoked to prevent further exploitation.
If the token is a JWT token it can use the exp claim to declare a expiration time and the jti claim to declare a unique identifier for the JWT which can be used to revoke it.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- IEEE 802.11
- Brave (peramban web)
- Alamat Kontrol Akses Media
- ChatGPT
- Jaringan Teknologi Komunikasi
- Universitas Presiden
- Pemerkosaan
- Timothy Laurence
- Mark Phillips
- Personal access token
- Token Ring
- Security token
- Access control
- Pat
- Tokenization (data security)
- Multi-factor authentication
- One-time password
- Non-fungible token
- Channel access method