The administrator sees that Rule: WEBZIP used was triggered.

12-2 Oracle Fusion Middleware Administrators Guide for Oracle Adaptive Access Manager Cities This group contains cities. For example, Presque Isle, Alakanuk, Chattahoochee, and so on. Connection Speed This group contains the internet connection speeds or bandwidths high, medium, low. This is an enum group type. Connection Type This group contains connection types. Common connection types to the internet are Optical, T1T3, Satellite, Cable, ISDN, Wireless, and so on. This is an enum group type. Countries This group contains countries. For example, black-listed countries. Devices This group contains devices IDs. Device IDs are unique identifications for devices such as PDA, cell phone, kiosk, and so on. For example, black-listed devices. Generics This group contains members related to string, integer, or long number information. Generic Longs This group contains long numbers. For example, stolen Social Security numbers, credit card numbers, or MAC addresses. Generic Strings This group contains generic strings. For example, if you wanted to permit anyone who has a variation of Smith to log in Smithson, Smithberg, Smithstein, and so on, then you could define a prefix string of Smith for comparison. Another example: if you want to block anyone from Pennsylvania, Transylvania, Spotsylvania, and so on, from logging in, you can define a suffix string. IP Carriers This group contains carriers of Internet Protocol IP traffic. IP Ranges This group contains a range of IPs. IPs This group contains the IP addresses of the users. Addresses may map to locations, although some addresses are unknown or private for example, 10.0.0.1. ISP This group contains Internet Service Providers. Examples of ISPs are Comcast, Verizon, AOL, and so on. User Name This group contains login names of users. It is set up by the user. For example: Bob is the login and the user is xyz123. User name may not be unique across applications. The unique combination would be the Organization ID with the user name. Routing Type This group contains routing types. Examples of routing types are POP, Satellite, Anonymizer, International, and so on. This is an enum group type. Second-level Domains This group contains second-level domain names. A second-level domain is a domain directly below a top-level domain TLD. Second-level domains commonly refer to the organization that registered the domain name. Second-level domain names can be used to pass and block whole sites such as .example.org or entire intranet levels such as .sales. or .admin. States This group contains states. For example, black-listed states. Table 12–1 Cont. Group Types Type Description Managing Groups 12-3

12.3 Group Usage

Groups are used in the following items: ■ Policies A policy is linked to a User ID group or all users and members of the user group or all users that are evaluated. The Policy Tree shows the linking of User ID groups to policies. ■ Rules within policies OAAM Admin applies rules on specified users, devices, or location groups to evaluate whether a fraud scenario occurred and to determine an outcome. A rule can trigger an action group, or an alert group, or both. ■ Conditions Some conditions use groups as a parameter type. For example, IP in IP Group. The condition takes IP Group name IP as a parameter. ■ Trigger combinations Alerts in groups are specified in the trigger combination. ■ Pre-condition User groups can be excluded in a policy. ■ Configurable Actions Members of a User ID group can be added to a User ID group dynamically using configurable actions.

12.4 User Flows

In the create and edit user flow, you always begin by searching for a group and then viewing the details before deciding if you want to update group membership, edit group details, or edit group members, or if you want to define a group. As an example user flow, the group creation flow, is shown in Figure 12–1 . Top-level Domains This group contains top-level domain names the last part of an Internet domain name, that is, the letters that follow the final dot of any domain name. Top-level domain names can be used to pass and block whole countries, for example,.uk, .ru, or .ca, and entire communities, for example, .mil, .info, .gov, or edu. Transaction Status This group contains the status of the user when a transaction is being performed. This is an enum group type. User ID This group contains User IDs. The customer uses a scheme to uniquely identify users. The User ID may not be unique across applications. The unique combination would be the Organization ID with the User ID. A special type of group is the Organization ID. Organization ID is a primary user group. A flag is set so that when users log in from the application, they are autopopulated into the group if they are not already members. You can use members of that group to scope policies. Table 12–1 Cont. Group Types Type Description