Skip to main content

Daimler AG deploys Ping identity to advance digital transformation

German-based Daimler AG has selected Ping Identity to provide identity and access management for its global network of employees, partners and clients to help advance its digitalisation initiatives and launch Internet of Things driven integrations. The standards-based PingFederate and PingAccess technology will reveal the identities with seamless interaction and access to a range of applications.
February 14, 2018 Read time: 1 min
German-based 2069 Daimler AG has selected Ping Identity to provide identity and access management for its global network of employees, partners and clients to help advance its digitalisation initiatives and launch Internet of Things driven integrations.


The standards-based PingFederate and PingAccess technology will reveal the identities with seamless interaction and access to a range of applications.

PingFederate is designed with the intention of enabling users to securely access all the applications they need with a single authentication from any device. In addition, PingAccess is said to manage authorisation capabilities and secure applications and application programming interfaces in any domain, for users in any location.

More information about Ping Identity is available on the %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external website false https://www.pingidentity.com/en.html false false%>.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bird acquires California-based EV firm Scoot
    June 19, 2019
    Scooter-share firm Bird is to acquire Scoot, a San Francisco-based electric vehicle (EV) company. Scoot began deploying electric scooters in San Francisco in 2012 and has expanded in Santiago, Chile and Barcelona. Travis VanderZanden, founder and CEO of Bird says the partnership will work toward replacing “car trips with micro mobility options for all”. Scoot will continue to operate under the same name but as a subsidiary of Bird.
  • Australia faces tough choices over toll tags
    September 12, 2014
    With more than seven million tolling tags nearing the end of their life, delegates to ITS Australia’s 2014 National Electronic Tolling Conference had more than a passing interest debating possible ways forward. Rex Wright, chair of the Australian Toll Road Users’ Group, said the industry was potentially facing an AUD$100million bill over the next five years but the toll operators are committed to a unified national approach, consistent with the current interoperability.
  • NTSB: Uber’s AV in fatal crash ‘had software issues’
    November 6, 2019
    The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has found that an Uber autonomous vehicle which killed Elaine Herzberg last year had software flaws. NTSB released a report which says the Volvo XC60’s autonomous system software classified the pedestrian as an unknown object and determined that an emergency braking manoeuvre was needed to mitigate the collision. Uber confirmed that emergency braking manoeuvres must be carried out manually and the system is not designed to alert the driver. Data
  • Connected cones make for safer sites
    May 31, 2013
    David Crawford welcomes new lives for old road safety products. Traffic cones and barrels have traditionally been on the bottom shelf of the road construction and maintenance industry, typically forming visible soft safety barriers for temporary works at a lower cost than concrete alternatives. On both sides of the Atlantic, however, they are fast gaining new roles as instrumented components in advanced construction safety arrays. The EC-sponsored €1 million (US$1.31 million) Safelane collaborative innovati