Update windows/security/identity-protection/vpn/how-to-use-single-sign-on-sso-over-vpn-and-wi-fi-connections.md

Co-authored-by: JohanFreelancer9 <48568725+JohanFreelancer9@users.noreply.github.com>
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Denise Vangel-MSFT 2022-03-22 12:42:19 -07:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ A "\*Session" credential implies that it is valid for the current user session.
The credentials are also cleaned up when the WiFi or VPN connection is disconnected. The credentials are also cleaned up when the WiFi or VPN connection is disconnected.
> [!NOTE] > [!NOTE]
> In Windows 10 version 21h2 or newer, "\*Session" credential is not visible in Credential Manager. > In Windows 10, version 21h2 and later, the "\*Session" credential is not visible in Credential Manager.
For example, if someone using Microsoft Edge tries to access a domain resource, Microsoft Edge has the right Enterprise Authentication capability. This allows [WinInet](/windows/win32/wininet/wininet-reference) to release the credentials that it gets from the Credential Manager to the SSP that is requesting it. For example, if someone using Microsoft Edge tries to access a domain resource, Microsoft Edge has the right Enterprise Authentication capability. This allows [WinInet](/windows/win32/wininet/wininet-reference) to release the credentials that it gets from the Credential Manager to the SSP that is requesting it.
For more information about the Enterprise Authentication capability, see [App capability declarations](/windows/uwp/packaging/app-capability-declarations). For more information about the Enterprise Authentication capability, see [App capability declarations](/windows/uwp/packaging/app-capability-declarations).