How context‑aware, short‑lived roles eliminate privilege sprawl and accelerate secure engineering without overburdening admins
Access management for remote resources has come a long way from VPNs and bastion hosts. The rise of cloud platforms, microservices and remote workforces has driven a shift toward Cloud-native security controls that integrate directly with AWS, Azure, GCP and Kubernetes. By talking directly to a cloud provider’s API, you avoid detours through proxy gateways, reducing latency and complexity.
Yet among Cloud-native platforms, there’s a stark difference in how they handle permissions. Some require security teams to pre‑create roles and permission sets, attaching them to identities or groups. Others assemble roles on the fly, taking into account who’s asking, what resource they need, why they need it and how sensitive it is. It’s a subtle but important distinction—one that determines whether your organization stays agile and secure or gets bogged down by privilege sprawl and bottlenecks when it comes to provisioning access.
Defining roles ahead of time seems sensible: you map out what engineers in a given team should be able to do and codify those permissions in your identity provider. Many platforms—even some cloud‑native ones—are built on this model. Administrators must build bundles of permissions in advance and decide who can use them.
In today’s dynamic environments, these pre‑created roles don’t age well. Consider the following pain points:
The alternative is to create permissions dynamically, directly on the resource at the moment of need. Rather than assigning users to broad roles, an API‑driven platform evaluates business context and environmental context to compose a least‑privilege role:
By combining these signals with live resource inventories and risk scores, the platform generates a granular IAM role or database policy. It grants only the permissions needed—no more, no less—and sets a short time‑to‑live. When the window expires or the user revokes it manually, the role disappears. This eliminates standing privileges, reducing the blast radius and shrinking the attack surface.
Unlike pre‑built roles, on‑demand roles adapt to changes automatically. Add a new AWS service or deploy a new Kubernetes namespace, and the platform knows how to grant access without manual intervention. There’s no catalogue of roles to keep up to date.
From an admin and security perspective, the advantages of on‑the‑fly roles extend beyond basic convenience:
Static role environments suffer from two chronic issues: sprawl and permission delays.
By generating roles dynamically, you avoid both extremes. Permissions are granted only when justified and revoked when no longer needed. Engineers get exactly what they need, and nothing sticks around to clutter your environment or widen the attack surface.
Role management is often viewed as administrative toil—necessary but not strategic. On‑demand role platforms transform it into a policy exercise. Security teams define guardrails:
The platform then executes those rules at scale, interacting with IAM APIs, databases and Kubernetes RBAC to create and remove roles. Administrators no longer spend hours translating business requests into JSON policy documents; instead, they review policy changes and investigate exceptions.
There’s no one‑size‑fits‑all solution. Organizations with static, on‑prem infrastructure might find that pre‑defined roles remain manageable. If your applications rarely change and your user base is small, a handful of roles may suffice. However, most security leaders are grappling with rapid cloud adoption, microservices and globally distributed teams. In these environments, static role catalogues cannot keep up without sacrificing security or productivity.
On‑demand roles strike a balance: they provide the flexibility engineers need to do their jobs while enforcing the controls security leaders require. By incorporating business context, identity information, risk signals and external workflows, they deliver least‑privilege access that adapts in real time and vanishes when no longer relevant.
Breaking down the trade-offs between API integration and proxy gateways for modern access management
The way organizations manage access has fundamentally shifted. In the past, infrastructure was mostly static—centralized data centers, long-lived servers, and predictable traffic patterns. You could rely on VPNs, firewalls, and a fixed set of roles in your identity provider. Access paths were clear, and change was infrequent.
But that’s no longer the case.
Today’s modern cloud environments are built for speed, scale, and change. Engineering teams push code constantly. Resources are ephemeral—spun up and torn down in minutes. Your infrastructure might span AWS, Azure, and GCP, including Kubernetes clusters, serverless functions, SaaS apps, and dynamic databases. And your workforce is distributed, collaborating across time zones and tools.
That complexity breaks traditional access models.
To address these challenges, two primary models have emerged for managing Just-in-Time (JIT) access:
Below we explore where each approach has its strengths and where they may fit in for managing your environments.
Proxy‑based solutions grew out of on‑prem networks. They require you to install and manage proxy servers and/or client-side agents that sit between users and resources. That architecture introduces extra moving parts and forces you to re‑route traffic through dedicated gateways.
API‑driven platforms take a different tack. They integrate directly with your cloud and infrastructure providers. There are no network changes, no additional servers to maintain, no VPN or bastion host to babysit, and no additional client side component to install. Deployment happens through familiar automation tools—Terraform modules, CloudFormation templates, Helm charts—so you can add JIT controls without redesigning your network.
Key takeaways:
One of the biggest drawbacks of proxy‑based systems is their reliance on pre‑defined roles and session logs. Access is granted at a network or account level; if you need something more granular, an administrator has to create and maintain new roles.
Monitoring is very problematic because of the disconnect many times to the proxyed account they are using. Session logs that IR teams leverage see a single or obfuscated account and not the real person that was on the other side of the proxy.
API‑based platforms turn that model on its head. The more mature platforms do not depend on the precreated, static roles but instead evaluate business context and risk (think: the resource you’re touching, your current on‑call schedule, the justification in your ticket) and generate granular roles on the fly.
Those roles exist only as long as necessary—minutes or hours instead of days or weeks—so there’s no standing privilege to attack. Because the access decision happens at the resource level, you can grant “read‑only” on a specific S3 bucket or database schema instead of giving blanket access to an entire cloud account.
What that means for you:
Proxies excel at securing SSH sessions into servers. But today’s infrastructure is more than SSH: it’s Kubernetes clusters, managed databases, serverless platforms and SaaS applications. Proxy tools often struggle outside of network‑level access because they weren’t built for it.
API‑based platforms are designed for this complexity. They connect via the native APIs of AWS, Azure, GCP and Kubernetes, understand cloud identities and roles, and speak the language of your CI/CD pipeline. They also integrate with collaboration tools like Slack and Teams so engineers can request and approve access without leaving their chat client.
For teams working across multiple clouds or adopting cloud‑native services, the differences are tangible:
A proxy‑based system still has its place. If your environment is largely on‑prem, composed of long‑lived servers and network boundaries that rarely change, a proxy can provide a straightforward way to centralize control. It can be easier to bolt onto a static network where traffic patterns are predictable.
That said, you’ll need to accept the operational overhead—deploying and maintaining proxy nodes and clients, managing agent versions and steering traffic through those gateways. In environments where agility matters or where cloud adoption is accelerating, that trade‑off often becomes a liability.
If your organization runs in the cloud, API-based JIT platforms offer the fastest path to enforcing least-privilege access—without the complexity of proxies or the rigidity of static roles.
Apono takes this further.
As a cloud-native platform, Apono delivers ephemeral, context-aware access directly on the resource. It evaluates real-time identity, risk, and business signals to automate just-in-time, just-enough permissions—eliminating manual role maintenance and reducing overexposure.
Proxy-based tools may work for static, on-prem environments—but they often fall short in modern, dynamic infrastructure.
Let us show you how Apono fits your cloud-native environment and book your personalized demo today.
New details are emerging about a wave of intrusions into Amazon Web Services environments. Attackers are reportedly weaponizing AWS IAM, using it to validate stolen credentials and turn identity controls into a springboard for in-cloud abuse.
According to new research from Fortinent, attackers are leveraging the open source TruffleHog tool to automate testing of stolen AWS credentials in what they are calling the TruffleNet infrastructure.
In their report, researchers say that the hackers are abusing AWS IAM to actually test the validity of their stolen credentials using a GetCallerIdentity call.
Once inside their targets’ environments, attackers are exploiting the compromised infrastructure to carry out Business Email Compromise (BEC) attacks via AWS’s Simple Email Service (SES).
Additionally, Fortinent’s researchers observed that the attackers were using the AWS CLI to query the GetSendQuota API for SES. They believe these queries to be a part of the abuse of SES for use in their downstream attacks like the BEC attacks that have been cited in the researchers’ report.
Read Fortinent’s blog post for more info on how the attackers are leveraging open source tools and AWS infrastructure, as well as the tricks used for their BEC campaign.
At this stage, the BEC attacks appear to be the “smash and grab” part of the plan.
But researchers note that the hackers are also leveraging their infiltration capabilities to carry out reconnaissance inside the compromised infrastructure.
This snooping around can be the crucial first step in future stages of their operations where attackers can go after sensitive resources like regulated data (think PII & PHI) as well as production environments that can harm the business.
There are a number of valuable take aways from this story that reinforce what we know surrounding the risks of compromised credentials:
Remove Standing Access
By eliminating standing access the attacker cannot use any attached privileges to access resources, even if an identity is compromised. By moving to a Just-in-Time (JIT) access model, all access is made available to identities, human or not, temporarily and instantaneously. This ensures that access privileges are not abused and improves developer velocity.
Minimize the Blast Radius
Continuously reduce privileges to support least-privilege ops via a Just-Enough (JEA) approach. Apono’s Access Discovery capabilities uncover overprivileged identities and provide data-driven recommendations on how to reduce privileges without impacting productivity, all based on real usage.
Simplify Remediations
Apono’s approach to reducing privileges steps away from the binary of choosing to either leave risky privileges in place or revoking privileges that can break processes. Risky privileges can be quarantined via Access Flow deny policies, enabling security teams to quickly remove the risk and quickly reverting access if needed.

Apono enables organizations to adopt a Zero Standing Privileges (ZSP) approach in support of their Zero Trust initiatives.
See how Apono can help your organization prevent credential-based attacks while keeping teams fast and productive. Visit apono.io/jit-and-jep/ to learn more about our platform or request a demo.
AI is rewriting the rules of privileged access, but the rise of AI agents is creating a governance crisis. Threats like credential stuffing and privilege escalation are now accelerated by autonomous systems moving faster than humans can react.
82% of companies deploy autonomous AI agents, but 23% of IT teams admit those bots have already been tricked into revealing credentials—and fewer than half have guardrails in place. In modern infrastructure, machine identities now outnumber humans 80:1. These non-human identities (NHIs) power everything from APIs to AI pipelines, and each one needs access.
The problem? Legacy PAM tools, which remain vault-centric, weren’t built for this scale. Cloud PAM solutions step in with just-in-time, least-privilege access to shrink your attack surface and keep both humans and machines in check.
Privileged Access Management (PAM) controls and monitors the use of accounts with elevated permissions. It is closely related to enterprise identity management, and traditional PAM meant vaults, long-lived credentials, heavy-handed approvals, and developer friction.
Cloud PAM solutions are the modern evolution of PAM, purpose-built for cloud-native and API-driven environments. Instead of relying on static roles and clunky approvals, cloud PAM delivers on-demand, time-bound access through automation and integrations. These solutions use Just-In-Time (JIT) access to issue ephemeral credentials that expire automatically, ensuring no leftover privileges are waiting to be exploited.
Cloud PAM is designed to secure not just human admins but also the massive number of non-human identities (service accounts, API keys, and ML pipelines) that dominate today’s AI-driven workloads.
| Feature | Legacy PAM | Cloud PAM |
| Architecture | Built for on-premises, data center environments | Cloud-native, API-first, designed for distributed systems |
| Access Model | Static roles and long-lived credentials stored in vaults | Just-In-Time (JIT) access with ephemeral, auto-expiring permissions |
| Deployment | Heavy agents, complex setup | Lightweight integrations, deploys quickly in cloud stacks |
| Scope of Protection | Focus on human administrators | Secures both human and non-human identities (service accounts, API keys, ML pipelines) |
| Scalability | Limited flexibility, difficult to scale across multi-cloud | Dynamic, scalable for cloud-native and AI workloads |
| Risk Exposure | Standing privileges, static secrets, higher attack surface | Least-privilege, time-bound access reduces attack surface |
AI workloads bring massive growth in both human and non-human identities, and here are four reasons why cloud PAM solutions are superior for modern problems:
🔍 Evaluate Your Next Cloud PAM Move
Not all PAM tools were built for AI-driven environments. Download the Access Platform Buyer’s Guide to see how leading security teams evaluate Cloud PAM capabilities — from Zero Standing Privilege to Non-Human Identity control.
Not all PAM platforms are built for cloud-native, AI-driven environments. When evaluating modern cloud PAM tools, these features should be at the top of your list:

With so many cloud PAM tools on the market, choosing the right one for AI-heavy environments means focusing on more than just credential storage. Here’s what to look for:
Let’s break down the best privileged access management software options for cloud-native and AI-driven workloads.

The Systancia Cleanroom solution enables session isolation and real-time monitoring to protect critical systems from credential theft and insider threats. Unlike traditional vault-centric PAM, Systancia delivers a cloud-native approach that prioritizes user experience and regulatory compliance.
Main Features:
Best for: Regulated industries needing strong session isolation.
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “It’s easy to understand and use. [I like the features, such as] password rotation, recording sessions, white room administration, MFA, [and more].”

Apono is a cloud-native access management platform purpose-built for the scale and speed of modern, AI-driven environments. Unlike vault-based PAM, Apono delivers an API-first model that automates JIT and least privilege access for both human and non-human identities. By issuing ephemeral, auto-expiring permissions, Apono ensures users and services get precisely the access they need—only when they need it.
Main Features:
Best for: Cloud-native organizations running AI/ML pipelines that need to secure both human and non-human identities with fast, just-in-time access.
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “As a SecOps Manager implementing the Apono platform, I experienced significant improvements in our organization’s security posture, operational efficiency, and compliance capabilities.”

Wallix Bastion’s PAM platform focuses on delivering secure, auditable control over administrative accounts in hybrid and multi-cloud environments. Gartner recognizes it for helping enterprises enforce the least privilege and monitor privileged activity.
Main Features:
Best for: Enterprises requiring centralized credential management.
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “WALLIX PAM provides strong security for privileged access management with an intuitive interface, real-time monitoring, and robust audit logs.”

StrongDM is a modern infrastructure access platform that approaches PAM differently. Instead of traditional password vaults, it focuses on secure, dynamic connectivity. It gives developers, DevOps, and security teams centralized control over access to databases, servers, Kubernetes clusters, and cloud environments.
Main Features:
Best for: DevOps teams wanting frictionless, VPN-free access to databases, servers, and Kubernetes.
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “The integration capabilities are top-notch, allowing us to embed StrongDM into complex environments with minimal friction.”

Teleport is an open-source platform that unifies secure access to servers, databases, Kubernetes clusters, and internal applications under a single, identity-based solution. Teleport uses certificates and short-lived credentials to provide strong, auditable privileged access.
Main Features:
Best for: Engineering teams favoring open-source, zero trust access with short-lived certificates.
Price: Open-source version is free; enterprise pricing available by inquiry.
Review: “The session recording and audit logging features are incredibly useful for compliance and troubleshooting.”

CyberArk’s PAM solution combines credential vaulting, session monitoring, and threat detection to deliver enterprise-grade control over privileged accounts in hybrid and cloud environments.
Main Features:
Best for: Large enterprises and highly regulated sectors needing enterprise-grade PAM with vaulting and anomaly detection.
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “CyberArk Privileged Access Management (PAM) is an excellent tool for any organization looking to protect privileged access to critical systems and sensitive data.”

Netwrix Privilege Secure is part of Netwrix’s suite, which delivers end-to-end privileged access control with task automation and compliance built in. It’s designed to eliminate standing privileges and make administrative access safer and easier to manage across hybrid environments.
Main Features:
Best for: Organizations battling privilege sprawl who need continuous discovery.
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “[I like the] do-it-yourself proof of concept, open and straightforward commercial track, variety of architectural designs, and seamless rollout.”

While it’s broader than traditional PAM, JumpCloud is an open directory platform with privileged access capabilities designed to help organizations manage admin rights, enforce least privilege, and secure hybrid IT environments.
Main Features:
Best for: IT teams consolidating identity, device, and privileged access management into a single, all-in-one cloud directory platform (although PAM is not its core strength).
Price: Free plan available; paid plans start per user/month, with enterprise pricing by inquiry.
Review: “As a developer, I really appreciate the smooth integrations with different tools and the straightforward APIs—it saves a lot of time when setting up authentication and access controls.”
| Solution | Main Features | Best For | Price |
| Systancia | Enhanced authentication, multiple deployment modes, adaptive control levels | Regulated industries needing strong session isolation | By inquiry |
| Apono | JIT access, self-serve via Slack/Teams/CLI, auto-expiring credentials, detailed audit logs, fast deployment | Cloud-native orgs running AI/ML pipelines securing human & non-human identities | By inquiry |
| Wallix Bastion | On-prem, cloud, or managed service; context-based temporary access; password vaulting | Enterprises requiring centralized credential management | By inquiry |
| StrongDM | Session & query logs, CLI/SDK integrations, connection brokering (no static secrets) | DevOps teams wanting frictionless, VPN-free infra access | By inquiry |
| Teleport | Certificate-based access, session recording, IdP integration, identity-aware proxy | Engineering teams favoring open-source, Zero Trust access | Free OSS; enterprise pricing by inquiry |
| CyberArk | Credential vaulting, anomaly detection, integrations with major clouds/IdPs, JIT access | Large enterprises & regulated sectors needing enterprise-grade PAM | By inquiry |
| Netwrix | Privileged task automation, MFA-protected temporary access, detailed auditing & compliance logs | Orgs battling privilege sprawl needing continuous discovery | By inquiry |
| JumpCloud | Cross-platform device control, SSO & MFA, granular admin rights with JIT elevation | IT teams consolidating identity, device, and privileged access | Free plan; paid per user/month |
In an AI-first enterprise, privileged access is both the biggest enabler and the greatest risk. Cloud PAM solutions help organizations scale securely, replacing static controls with just-in-time, least-privilege access.
Apono is built for this world: API-driven, cloud-native, and designed to protect non-human identities. With ephemeral, auditable permissions, your teams move fast and your auditors stay happy. See Apono in action to explore how it secures AI workloads without slowing developers.
Identity is now the most common entry point for attackers. In cloud-native environments, thousands of microservices, containers, and agents request credentials every day, and each one represents a potential weakness. The imbalance between human and non-human identities (NHIs) is growing, but many organizations still devote the bulk of their identity and access governance (IGA) efforts to the former.
Over the past two years, 57% of organizations experienced at least one API-related breach; of those, 73% saw three or more incidents. At the same time, the global IAG market was valued at approximately $8 billion in 2024, driven by compliance frameworks such as SOC 2, GDPR, HIPAA, and CCPA that demand auditable proof of access controls.
The takeaway: static defenses built on logins and standing permissions can’t keep pace with identities that appear and disappear daily. For engineering teams, identity and access governance has shifted from a “nice-to-have” to a baseline requirement for both security and trust.
Identity and access governance (IGA) is the framework your organization can use to decide who should have access to systems, applications, and data, and whether that access is still appropriate. IGA goes beyond the mechanics of logging and instead focuses on oversight, accountability, and policy enforcement.
Most IGA programs are built around a few core practices:
Unlike identity and access management (IAM), which enforces access at runtime, IGA asks the harder question: should this access exist at all? Answering this question is harder today because identities are multiplying. Machine identities outnumber humans by over 80 to 1, making them one of the fastest-growing risk classes in cloud-native environments. Unlike human accounts, NHIs rarely go through onboarding or offboarding, rely on static API keys or long-lived tokens, and are frequently overprivileged—the perfect storm for attackers.

IGA is about ensuring access is both appropriate, accountable, and, most importantly, auditable. To achieve these three pillars, IGA platforms bring together several capabilities.
Crucially, modern IGA extends these capabilities beyond human users to include NHIs, ensuring service accounts and automation agents undergo the same scrutiny as employees.

Identity management has grown into a set of overlapping disciplines, each with its own focus. Many people still use the terms interchangeably, but this approach can blur the lines between strategic governance and privileged account protection.
It’s helpful to understand exactly where each begins and ends. IAM is concerned with authentication and access control at the point of login. IGA adds oversight, certification, and auditability across all identities. To monitor and control their activity, privileged access management (PAM) narrows in on the riskiest accounts, such as administrators and root users. For example, organizations rely on PAM software to enforce controls around these sensitive accounts, ensuring that high-risk permissions are granted only when necessary and closely monitored.
| Discipline | Focus | Typical Scope | Key Purpose |
| IAM | Enforcement | Authentication, MFA, SSO | Prove identity and control access at login |
| IGA | Governance | Human and non-human identities | Define, review, and certify who should have access and why |
| PAM | Privilege | High-risk administrator and root accounts | Control and monitor privileged sessions |
In a cloud-native stack, thousands of containers, pods, and serverless functions may launch and terminate within minutes. Each instance often requires its own token or temporary credential to function. Legacy governance processes that rely on quarterly or monthly reviews cannot track this churn, so permissions are left unchecked. Security teams end up with audit trails that miss most of the short-lived identities, which makes proving compliance or investigating incidents almost impossible. A best practice to overcome this challenge is to use a cloud-native access management solution like Apono, which automates JIT access and generates granular audit logs, so even short-lived identities are governed in real time.
Cloud providers like AWS, Azure, and GCP offer permission systems with thousands of individual actions that can be combined into highly customized roles. Developers frequently over-provision roles because mapping business tasks to such granular entitlements is too time-consuming. Over time, these permission sprawl problems multiply, creating toxic combinations that static governance models don’t properly evaluate.
When engineers need access to a production database or a new cloud service, the request usually goes into a ticket queue. When reviews take too long, teams are forced to delay work or find workarounds such as borrowing credentials.
This bottleneck not only slows delivery but also weakens governance because security becomes seen as a blocker rather than a partner. In some organizations, administrators pre-approve broad entitlements “just in case.” This mistake undermines the entire principle of least privilege and increases the chance of compromised credentials being abused across environments.

Unmonitored NHIs are among the most consistent attack vectors in identity-driven breaches today. Service accounts and automation agents run critical workflows in CI/CD pipelines, monitoring systems, and infrastructure tools. These identities often carry long-lived credentials with powerful permissions. Unlike human users, they rarely leave the organization, so deprovisioning processes don’t catch them.
When one of these accounts is forgotten or left unmonitored, it becomes a permanent backdoor. Attackers frequently target exposed API keys or tokens for this reason, knowing they are less likely to be rotated or reviewed. As we’ve seen with emerging issues like the MCP protocol, unsecured machine-to-machine communications can further amplify the risks of unmanaged NHIs.
Recent examples include Microsoft’s 2023 SAS Token Leak, where researchers inadvertently published a token that exposed 38TB of internal data, and the BeyondTrust API Key Breach in 2024, where attackers exploited an overprivileged, static key to reset passwords and escalate privileges. Both incidents highlight how unmanaged non-human identities can open the door to large-scale compromise.
An essential NHI security best practice is to run a Cloud Access Assessment to uncover risks in your AWS environment, provided by Apono at no cost (for a limited time only). Apono’s platform is built to close this blind spot by enforcing JIT and JEP policies for NHIs just like human accounts, stopping long-lived keys from becoming backdoors.
Most enterprises work across multiple clouds, each with its own identity console and reporting format. Security teams trying to answer “who can access sensitive data” are forced to stitch together incomplete reports. The lack of a unified view leaves gaps for auditors and prevents real-time oversight—a challenge that becomes even more critical in industries like FinTech or government, which are subject to additional compliance requirements like CUI Basic.
Identity governance is moving from periodic checks to continuous oversight. Instead of leaving broad permissions in place and revisiting them months later, newer approaches shift towards:
By enforcing just-in-time access and contextual approvals, IGA reduces the standing permissions that often undermine API security in CI/CD pipelines and cloud workloads.

Cloud-native deployments and the explosion of non-human identities have pushed traditional identity governance past its limits. Static reviews and manual approvals leave too much standing access in environments where roles and permissions change constantly. To reduce risk, governance needs automation, time-bound access, and policies that apply equally to people and non-human accounts.
Apono redefines IGA for cloud-native teams. It eliminates risky standing permissions for both human and non-human identities, while ensuring compliance frameworks increasingly require full visibility into NHI governance. Apono’s platform automates JIT and JEP to eliminate standing permissions, generates granular audit logs for compliance, and applies governance equally to human and non-human identities. Approvals flow directly through Slack, Teams, or CLI—every action logged, every change auditable.
With built-in break-glass and on-call flows, and deployment in under 15 minutes, Apono delivers Zero Trust governance at the speed of modern infrastructure.
Ready to Eliminate Standing Access Risk?
Apono closes the gap by automating JIT and JEP for both human and non-human identities — stopping long-lived keys from becoming backdoors.Download The Security Leader’s Guide to Eliminating Standing Access Risk to see how leading cybersecurity companies are rethinking access control.
New details are emerging in recent weeks on how the Crimson Collective threat group has been conducting a large-scale campaign targeting Amazon Web Services cloud environments. Recent reports highlight how easily the attackers progressed once they obtained valid credentials.
The Crimson Collective claims to have exfiltrated ~570 GB across ~28,000 internal GitLab projects; Red Hat has confirmed access to a Consulting GitLab instance but hasn’t verified the full scope of those claims.
After the breach became public, Bleeping Computer reports that the threat actors partnered with headline-grabbing extortion group, Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters, to increase pressure on Red Hat.
In this post, we’ll break down how the hackers carried out their attack and how to keep your organization protected via a Zero Standing Privileges approach.
According to the report from Rapid 7 in Bleeping Computer, the attackers took a tried but true course of action to compromise their targets and make off with their illicitly obtained data.
This latest attack highlights a tough if not cliche truth in the cloud: attackers don’t need to break in if they can just log in. Once credentials with standing privileges are compromised, it gives them everything they need to move freely across environments.
The reality is that credential compromise is now a matter of when, not if. And as the number of Non-Human Identities (NHIs)—like service accounts, IAM roles, and API keys—continues to explode, the challenge keeps growing. In many organizations, NHIs now outnumber human users by roughly 200 to 1.
Things are getting even more complicated with the rise of Agentic AI tools. These systems operate at massive scale with unpredictable access needs, often without the visibility security teams rely on to monitor what’s actually being accessed.
Protecting against these kinds of attacks means focusing not just on preventing credential theft, but on minimizing what attackers can do after credentials are compromised. That’s why AWS told BleepingComputer that customers should “use short-term, least-privileged credentials and implement restrictive IAM policies.”
That advice perfectly captures the idea behind Zero Standing Privileges (ZSP), reducing the amount of always-on access available in your environment, so even if credentials are stolen, attackers have nowhere to go.
Of course, actually putting that into practice is the hard part. Manual access management is slow and painful, and cutting privileges too aggressively risks hurting productivity. And as cloud environments and NHIs multiply, keeping up manually just isn’t realistic anymore.
Apono makes it simple to put Zero Standing Privileges into action—without slowing anyone down.
Here’s how:
With Apono, security teams can close privilege gaps before attackers can exploit them, while developers and AI systems get access exactly when—and only when—they need it.
Ready to take a smarter approach to cloud access?
See how Apono can help your organization prevent credential-based attacks while keeping teams fast and productive. Visit apono.io/jit-and-jep/ to learn more about our platform or request a demo.
Imagine autonomous agents negotiating and acting on your behalf—no manual hand-offs, just an efficient, policy‑driven communication. That’s the promise of Google’s Agent2Agent (A2A) Protocol, unveiled at Google Cloud Next in April 2025. Developed with input from over 50 partners, A2A is now open-sourced under the Apache 2.0 license and governed by the Linux Foundation.
But excitement quickly collides with reality. Early adopters report compliance blind spots (who approved that token and when?), latency added by cross-agent orchestration, and the operational overhead of adding another standard into pipelines. As agent-based architectures become the backbone of AI-driven automation, the pressure is mounting on engineering teams to enable secure, autonomous interactions between services.
A 2025 global AI survey reveals that 29% of enterprises are already running agentic AI in production, with another 44% planning to join them within a year. Cost-cutting and reducing manual workloads are among the top goals for adoption. Understanding the Agent2Agent Protocol is vital for building secure and scalable systems that can keep up with the next wave of automation.

Google’s Agent-to-Agent (A2A) Protocol is an open, vendor-neutral language that lets independent AI agents discover each other, negotiate how they will talk (text, files, streams), and work together without exposing their private code or data.
Google unveiled the spec on April 9, 2025, at Cloud Next. It is backed by more than 50 technology partners and is now maintained as an open-source project under the Apache 2.0 license.
Google kicked the A2A project off after running large, multi-agent systems for customers and seeing the same pain points repeat:
The four-step flow below illustrates the full A2A handshake from discovery to streaming task updates.

Every agent publishes a tiny JSON file, /.well-known/agent.json, listing its name, endpoint, skills, and supported auth flows. A client agent simply fetches this card (directly or via a registry) to see who can do what and how to connect.
The card also tells the caller which OAuth 2/OIDC method to use. The client obtains a short-lived token (minutes), allowing access to be scoped and automatically expires. This step eliminates hardcoded secrets, marking a shift from static secrets to dynamic machine identity management, where each agent authenticates based on policy, context, and lifespan.
With a token in hand, the client sends a task/send or task/sendSubscribe request via JSON-RPC 2.0 over HTTPS.
Each request/response carries trace IDs, and agents emit structured logs and metrics in OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) format. You can drop A2A traffic straight into existing dashboards without bolting on a separate telemetry layer. This level of observability is essential for identifying anomalies and containing the risks of non-human identities operating in complex, distributed environments.
Many teams adopting A2A have struggled with blind spots, like losing track of which agents initiated sensitive operations or where tokens are reused across flows. Without built-in tracing and structured logs, auditing multi-agent systems becomes a fragmented, manual task. A2A’s observability layer helps reduce that operational burden, but it still requires thoughtful integration with existing security tooling.

At its core, A2A gives every software agent a common language and contract so they can:
By replacing brittle webhooks and custom RPC layers with an open JSON-RPC spec, the Agent2Agent Protocol eliminates glue code and reduces integration overhead across ecosystems.
Because discovery, auth, transport, and telemetry are part of the spec, you don’t waste cycles reinventing service discovery, API gateways, or audit pipelines. You wire agents together (much like microservices), then layer governance tools on top to enforce least-privilege, time-boxed access across your infra. It reduces repetitive integration tasks, which improves developer productivity across teams working in complex environments.
The Agent2Agent Protocol solves real pain points in DevOps and automation by making agent communication smarter and safer. Here’s why it’ll be beneficial in the long run.
Any AI agent that speaks A2A can call, or be called by, any other agent.
Example: If a vulnerability scanner agent discovers a patch management agent during a CI run, it can send a task with the CVE list and stream the fix status back to the build.
Short-lived OAuth/OIDC tokens and signed task IDs keep access scoped and auditable without requiring the hardcoding of secrets.
Example: When a monitoring bot detects a spike, it requests a one-off token to spin up extra pods. The token expires automatically once scaling is complete, aligning with enterprise identity management best practices.
The Agent2Agent Protocol includes built-in support for agent discovery, JSON-RPC 2.0 transport, and SSE streaming. Teams can focus on features instead of writing adapters and polling loops.
Example: A scheduler agent queries rightsizing agents in AWS, GCP, and Azure, aggregates savings, and opens a single cost-cutting PR. No polling scripts are required.
Every request carries trace IDs and standard OTLP metrics, which are dropped straight into Grafana/Prometheus dashboards, regardless of whether those agents are operating in the cloud, across edge services, or in traditional data centers.
Example: A chatbot passes a billing request to a payment agent via A2A; the handoff is fully logged, and the one-time token expires as soon as the charge is completed.

These guiding principles explain why A2A stays flexible, secure, and developer-friendly as the ecosystem expands.
Follow this step-by-step guide to adopt your first A2A agents and weave them safely into your workflow.
Clone Google’s reference repo and drop it into the Python SDK.
git clone https://github.com/a2aproject/a2a-samples.git
cd a2a-samples
python -m venv .venv && source .venv/bin/activate
pip install a2a-python # or a2a-js for Node
The repo includes basic example agents and lightweight helper code for JSON-RPC calls and SSE streaming, but production implementations will need hardening.
Pick one of the ready-made agents (e.g., the “currency” FastAPI service) and run it.
uvicorn samples.python.currency_agent:app --port 10000 --reload
When the server starts, it auto-serves an Agent Card at: https://localhost:10000/.well-known/agent.json, advertising its skills and auth method.
Make that JSON file reachable via a public URL, an internal LB, or a registry entry. Other agents can pull it and learn who you are and how to talk. No extra service-discovery layer is required. For production environments, agents can also publish to a centralized A2A registry, which supports indexed search and simplifies discovery across large infrastructures.
Edit the auth block in the Agent Card to point at your OIDC or token issuer and set the TTL to minutes. Every task call will now carry a scoped, self-expiring token instead of a long-lived secret.
From another agent (or just curl), invoke the first agent:
TOKEN=$(<your_token_here> --ttl 5m --aud currency-agent)
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" \
-X POST https://currency-agent:10000/tasks/sendSubscribe \
-d '{"input":{"amount":"50","from":"USD","to":"JPY"}}'
The request uses JSON-RPC 2.0 over HTTPS; the sendSubscribe variant opens a Server-Sent Events stream, so you get live status until completed.
The SDK emits OTLP logs/metrics with a shared trace ID. Point OTLP logs and metrics to your backend of choice for unified observability.
The Agent-to-Agent (A2A) Protocol enables software agents to trade tasks and data on the fly, but it truly shines when access is tightly controlled and fully auditable. Apono and the A2A Protocol share a key mission: enabling secure, policy-driven access between non-human identities (NHIs) like service accounts, bots, and APIs. Apono ensures that, even as NHIs interoperate across boundaries, their access is ephemeral, precisely scoped, and compliant.
Apono’s platform is purpose-built to manage access for NHIs by enforcing Just-In-Time (JIT) and Just-Enough-Privilege (JEP) access, thereby reducing standing privileges and misconfigurations. It ensures every service account, bot, or API key gets only the access it needs for exactly as long as it’s needed.
Apono is designed to become the enforcer of orchestrated permissions across infrastructure by automating and right-sizing the lifecycle of access for NHIs—including provisioning, expiration, and auditability—to install least privilege for NHIs and bring zero trust to all of your identities.
With Apono’s auto-expiring tokens and centralized logs, you can narrow the window for misuse and provide security teams with a single source of truth when compliance and auditing questions arise.
Get hands-on with Apono. Request a demo to deploy in under 15 minutes and start eliminating overprivileged access.
Security and engineering teams today face a tough balance: protecting sensitive resources while keeping developers productive. As organizations shift from on-prem to the cloud, access management becomes one of the biggest challenges.
With more identities—human and non-human—gaining access to more resources across hybrid environments, the risks rise. Studies show that over 95% of identities hold excessive privileges, and attackers are exploiting this reality, with 88% of breaches starting from compromised identities.
It’s natural for engineering teams to want to “build” their own Just-in-Time (JIT) access solution. But is that really the best use of resources? Increasingly, organizations are asking themselves:
Should we build an in-house solution or buy a platform that delivers secure, scalable JIT access out-of-the-box?
This article explores the trade-offs of building vs. buying so you can make the right choice for your organization.
Rolling your own JIT solution sounds simple, but in practice, it’s often a patchwork of services, scripts, and ongoing maintenance.
What it takes to build:
The hidden cost:
In short, the challenge isn’t just building. It’s maintaining, its testing, its patching and scanning for vulnerabilities. It’s having a team to support you.
💡 Thinking about building your own solution?
See how leading teams evaluate Cloud PAM platforms before they commit. Download the Access Platform Buyer’s Guide here
| Factor | Build In-House | Buy a Platform (General) | Apono Advantage |
| Speed to Deploy | Months to design, develop, and test, resulting in a slower time-to-value. | Typically faster deployment with vendor-provided integrations and support. | API-first deployment with Terraform, Helm, CloudFormation; Slack/Teams-native workflows for fast adoption. |
| Role Creation Model | Often depends on pre-created roles — slow to adapt, prone to over/under-privilege. | Many solutions offer role management, which may require predefined roles or templates. | Dynamic roles created in real time, scoped to the task, auto-expire, and adapt automatically to business context. |
| Coverage | Limited to your team’s integration work; gaps likely in multi-cloud/SaaS. | Most vendors offer coverage across major cloud and SaaS platforms, but breadth and depth can vary. | Comprehensive support across AWS, Azure, GCP, Kubernetes, SaaS, and NHIs; single-pane-of-glass management. |
| Operational Overhead | Continuous upkeep for API changes, security patches, and policy logic. | Vendor-managed updates and maintenance help reduce the burden on internal teams. | Fully vendor-managed with continuous support for new APIs; automated discovery reduces admin effort. |
| Customization | Fully tailored to unique workflows and niche systems. | Platforms typically offer policy frameworks and workflow flexibility, though some adjustments may be needed. | Granular Access Flows and contextual policies, easily adapted to customer workflows without brittle custom code. |
| Security Posture | Risk of drift if roles aren’t updated quickly; harder to keep least privilege. | Most platforms provide controls for enforcing least privilege, although they are often tied to predefined structures. | Real-time context evaluation ensures least privilege with just-in-time and just-enough access; supports NHI quarantine. |
| Slack / Jira Integration | Requires custom development and ongoing maintenance. | Many platforms offer some integrations, with varying depths. | Deep Slack, Teams, and Jira integrations for request → approve → provision flows. |
| Auto-Expiring Roles | Must be built and maintained manually with custom scripts. | Some vendors provide time-limited role options. | Native auto-expiring, context-aware roles scoped to the task. |
| Audit Logging | Logs are often fragmented across different systems, requiring manual correlation. | Platforms provide centralized logging, but the depth can vary. | Unified session auditing with identity-to-action tracking, SIEM & ticketing integration. |
| Deployment | Complex build-out requiring internal engineering resources. | Vendor platforms usually offer guided setup and professional services. | Fast, API-based deployment with pre-built integrations and self-service rollout. |
They say never roll your own crypto—because with great power comes great responsibility. The same applies to JIT access. It holds the keys to your most sensitive crown jewels, so protecting it must be a top priority.
Whether it’s a Lambda function or another microservice handling provisioning, it carries a lot of permissions. The real question: how are you ensuring it can’t be compromised, thereby handing attackers the keys to the kingdom?
Apono’s patented secure architecture keeps your environment fully in your control. Our platform runs on two lightweight components:
Why it matters:
With Apono, all access stays in your environment—you get secure, reliable, and compliant access management without friction.
Monday.com transitioned from maintenance-heavy in-house workflows to a secure, scalable, and developer-friendly platform—powered by Apono
ROI at Scale
ROI Of Your Internal Resources Is On What You Can Sell
If you’re managing access to a niche or one-off resource, building something in-house might feel tempting. But the reality is that most teams quickly learn the cost is higher than the benefit: ongoing maintenance, constant patching, compliance reviews, and dedicating precious engineering cycles to “plumbing” instead of product.
Modern teams need speed, security, and scalability—not another internal project to babysit. A proven cloud-native JIT access management solution delivers reliability out of the box, reduces risk, and frees your engineers to do what they do best: ship value to customers.
Download the Buyer’s Guide to learn how leading security teams compare Cloud PAM platforms — and why Apono is built for speed, scale, and Zero Standing Privilege.
Today’s man-in-the-middle (MitM) attacks go far beyond coffee-shop Wi-Fi: they target browsers, APIs, device enrollments, and DNS infrastructure. Using automated proxykits and supply-chain flaws, attackers hijack session cookies, tokens, and device credentials—turning one interception into persistent, high-value access.
Concerningly, these are not edge cases. Automated cyber threat activity surged 16.7%, with over 1.7 billion stolen credentials circulating on the dark web—fueling a 42% increase in credential-based targeted attacks. Passwords and simple MFA fail unless access is limited and continually verified.
Security teams can implement best practices, such as cutting token lifetimes and just-in-time elevation, to protect against man-in-the-middle attacks. Let’s review a comprehensive list of security controls you can implement immediately to make intercepted credentials worthless to attackers.
A man-in-the-middle (MitM) attack happens when an attacker secretly intercepts and manipulates communications between two parties. The attacker is positioned in the “middle” of the data exchange, between a user and an app, or between two users or two apps, without anyone noticing. With MitM attacks, the adversary can eavesdrop, steal credentials, alter data, or impersonate one of the parties involved.
Today’s MitM attacks target API calls, machine-to-machine traffic, and even naive agent-to-agent protocols in distributed, cloud-native environments. With stolen tokens or cookies, an attacker gains the same level of visibility and control as a legitimate service account.
Some examples of MitM techniques include:
A successful man-in-the-middle adversary gains the same level of visibility and control as the legitimate user or service. Non-human identities (NHIs)—like service accounts, workloads, and agents—are particularly vulnerable. In fact, machine identities now outnumber human identities by as much as 80:1, multiplying the blast radius of a single interception. Without a strong enterprise identity management strategy, these identities are often left overprivileged and unmonitored, creating an easy path for MitM attackers.

MitM attacks aren’t just theoretical risks; they can be the cause behind real breaches or even large-scale espionage campaigns. Let’s review the most relevant attack types that DevOps and engineering need to watch out for.
Attackers downgrade HTTPS connections to plain HTTP, eliminating the security layer of SSL/TLS. This attack vector leaves communication in plaintext, including login credentials, API keys, and session tokens. Misconfigured certificates, outdated systems, or user dismissal of browser warnings leave room for SSL stripping. DevOps teams are especially concerned about this in CI/CD pipelines and API endpoints, as a single misconfigured connection can become the entry point of a MitM attacker.
Example: The 2015 Superfish adware fiasco showed how software that installed its own root certificate could intercept HTTPS traffic by trusting a single private key. Because those certificates shared a key, anyone with the key could impersonate sites (including banks) without browser warnings.
Security best practices:
DNS hijacks and registrar compromises let attackers redirect entire domains to malicious infrastructure.
Example: Sea Turtle was a sophisticated espionage operation uncovered in 2019. Attackers targeted domain registrars, registries, and other DNS infrastructure to compromise DNS records and surreptitiously redirect traffic for targeted organizations to attacker-controlled servers. It allowed the attacker to intercept web and email traffic, steal credentials, and even serve forged or fraudulently issued TLS certificates to avoid immediate detection.
Security best practices:
So, what would these best practices look like in practice? Let’s look at an example. Caris Life Sciences used Apono to enforce JIT folder-level permissions in AWS S3—so even if DNS traffic were redirected, attackers couldn’t leverage long-lived standing credentials.
Attackers poison ARP tables on local networks to force traffic to flow through a malicious host, enabling sniffing and tampering with internal traffic.
Example: Pentest and tool writeups repeatedly show that cheap implants (like Wi-Fi Pineapple and Raspberry Pi) enable LAN ARP attacks. Effective data center management, such as strict network segmentation, helps reduce exposure to LAN-level MitM attacks.
Security best practices:

Threat actors use evil twin or malicious hotspots to steal users and proxy or intercept their traffic. This type of attack happens frequently in airports, public charging points, cafes, and hotels.
Example: In July 2024, Australian police arrested an individual for operating an “evil twin” hotspot that harvested travellers’ credentials by redirecting victims to spoofed login pages.
Security best practices:
Attackers replay stolen session cookies, tokens, or API keys to impersonate services or users, often without passwords. Stolen cookies and tokens don’t just result from MitM attacks; client-side flaws like cross-site scripting (XSS) can also expose session data and API keys, as seen in CVE-2024-44308.
Example: In the Microsoft SAS Token Leak (2023), researchers inadvertently published a Shared Access Signature token granting full access to an Azure Storage account and exposing 38TB of sensitive data. This NHI breach showed the risks of over-permissive, long-lived tokens.
Security best practices:
An attacker with network access (or who exploits a vulnerability in an agent) can intercept or impersonate the agent to server telemetry and commands, hijacking workflows and observability channels.
Example: The Okta Support System Breach in 2023 saw attackers exploit a compromised NHI (a service account) to steal support artifacts containing customer credentials. Additionally, CVE-2025-1146 (CrowdStrike Falcon Linux component) illustrates how TLS validation bugs can enable MitM of agent to cloud traffic.
A potential MiTM attack exploiting this flaw could trick the vulnerable CrowdStrike sensor into accepting a malicious, non-legitimate server certificate. This attack would allow the attacker to intercept, decrypt, and manipulate the secure communication between the sensor and the CrowdStrike cloud, potentially compromising system confidentiality and integrity.
Security best practices:

Simpler or unrecorded agent-to-agent protocols without mutual authentication or request signing enable MitM between agents and services in distributed systems. Such attacks may include context poisoning, agent impersonation, or exploiting an AI agent’s logic.
Example: Microsoft’s Taxonomy of Failure Modes in Agentic AI Systems warns how impostor agents could intercept agent communications. The research shows that an attacker could introduce an impostor AI agent, such as an impostor “email assistant,” into a network of cooperating agents. This malicious actor would then have the capability to intercept and alter legitimate communication between other actors, such that the attacker can inject new instructions and pilfer sensitive data without intervening directly by any human user.
Security best practices:
Where legacy PAM relies on static roles and vault proxies, leaving windows of opportunity open for MitM actors, Apono operationalizes Zero Standing Privilege. That means every credential, token, or role is short-lived, scoped, and continuously verified—dramatically reducing the blast radius of a single interception.
Man-in-the-middle attacks typically succeed when stolen credentials or tokens remain useful. The fastest prevention isn’t perfect encryption; it’s limiting how much data of value an attacker has. Make sessions transient, bind tokens to device and context, and identify proxying traffic so stolen credentials will decay or be revoked right away.
Operationally, focus on three levers: mandate phishing-immune MFA and device-bound authentication; use short-lived, auto-rotating tokens with per-call authorization and mTLS for traffic to services; and put high-risk activities behind human approvals and quick revocation playbooks. These steps keep attackers from turning a fleeting interception into a sustained breach.
Stolen tokens expire within minutes with Apono, preventing attackers from turning an interception into sustained access. Permissions expire automatically, machine identities are scoped per-call, and sensitive actions require approvals. Apono is built specifically for this approach: JIT access, automatically decaying permissions, scoped control over agents, and full audit trails reduce the blast radius in case of interceptions. See how temporary access turns the tables. Apono operationalizes zero trust by eliminating standing privileges across human and machine identities.
Book a demo and start making stolen credentials useless before they can be weaponized.
Identity-related threats are draining time and resources faster than security teams can keep up. The challenge is no longer just about stopping breaches; it’s about keeping up with the scale of alerts and risks.
On average, organizations spend 11 person-hours investigating each identity-related security alert. Meanwhile, credential theft has soared 160% in 2025, making privileged accounts and non-human identities (NHIs) a prime target for attackers.
Modern Privileged Access Management Software Solutions (PAM) offer a way forward by automating access controls and reducing standing privileges, filling the gaps left by traditional approaches and securing your organization.
Privileged Access Management software secures and controls access to high-value accounts like admin users and NHIs—basically any accounts that hold the keys to critical infrastructure. These solutions enforce the principle of least privilege, ensuring that users and services only get the access they need, for the minimum time required.
PAM software centralizes and automates access workflows, such as vaulting credentials, issuing short-lived tokens, monitoring privileged sessions, and enforcing policies like Just-in-Time (JIT) access. These tools provide many big ticks for security and compliance, such as creating audit trails for frameworks like SOC 2 and GDPR.
The need for PAM solutions is especially critical in today’s cloud environments, where non-human identities outnumber human users by more than 80:1. For example, instead of leaving a cloud service account (an NHI) with standing database or API security permissions, PAM tools can issue time-bound credentials only when that service is actively running a job.

Effective PAM platforms deliver more than protection—they streamline access and ensure that even machine-to-machine credentials are properly governed.
To understand why PAM is critical today, let’s look at what these solutions actually do and how they work.

When comparing PAM tools, it’s important to balance security with usability and scalability. Here are key factors to guide your decision-making.
🔍 Compare PAM Platforms with Confidence
Turn your shortlist into a smart choice. See the capabilities that matter for AI workloads, Zero Standing Privilege, and NHI governance. Download the 2025 Access Platform Buyer’s Guide here

StrongDM is a zero trust PAM platform that centralizes access across infrastructure, such as servers, databases, Kubernetes, cloud, and SaaS. Its key features include access policies and capturing session data for audits and compliance.
Main Features:
Price: Starts at $70/user/month.
Review: “Their platform is intuitive and highly secure, which makes it easy for us to recommend to clients across industries.”

Apono is a cloud-native access management solution built to eliminate standing privileges and reduce identity-based risks without slowing developers down. While most PAM solutions still rely on vaults and manual workflows, Apono eliminates these bottlenecks with a cloud-native, Just-in-Time model built for scale. It deploys in less than 15 minutes and integrates with developer-friendly tools like Slack, Microsoft Teams, and CLI, making secure access simple and scalable.
Main Features:
Price: Tailored pricing depending on team size and infrastructure complexity. A free trial is available, and enterprise-grade plans are available upon request.
Review: “Apono’s product does exactly what it claims to […] it saves me time, and provides value to my users by streamlining the process of granting access to our resources in a precise, auditable way.”

Heimdal Privileged Access Management is a comprehensive PAM module that enables JIT elevation and automatic de-escalation of user rights. It’s embedded within Heimdal’s broader cybersecurity suite.
Main Features:
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “While the solution can be complex to implement and manage, the benefits it provides in terms of enhanced security and improved efficiency are worth the investment.”

The Wallix Bastion PAM platform integrates password vaulting, session management, and access control, including HTML5 web sessions, with full video and metadata audits.
Main Features:
Price: User- or resource-based pricing available, starting at around $103/month for 10-50 users.
Review: “The setup process was simple, and the solution can be implemented within less than one day.”

ARCON PAM is an enterprise-grade solution delivering granular control over privileged identities and environments. It supports various features, from adaptive authentication to session monitoring and secrets management.
Main Features:
Price: By inquiry.
Review: “The UI has improved significantly over the past year, making navigation and policy configuration easier.”

Segura 360° Privilege Platform is an all-in-one PAM suite that spans the entire privileged access lifecycle. It covers password vaulting, DevOps secrets management, session recording, cloud identity governance, and more.
Main Features:
Price: All-inclusive licensing model available by inquiry.
Review: “The standout aspects are ease of use, robust security layers (MFA included), and excellent customer support.”

This option is often categorized as a Privileged Password Management (PMM) tool rather than a full-featured PAM. Still, ManageEngine offers a centralized, AES-256 encrypted vault for privileged credentials and remote session control. It integrates with Active Directory and CI/CD tools for seamless access governance.
Main Features:
Price:
Review: “Manage Engine Password Manager Pro is very user-friendly and easy to manage. [I use the] multi-factor authentication with strong encryption methods.”

Systancia’s PAM solution adapts its control levels based on the task’s criticality, ranging from standard internal administration to high-risk, highly regulated operations. It delivers additional features like contextual session monitoring and secure credential injection.
Main Features:
Price: By inquiry
Review: “Systancia Gate and Systancia Cleanroom allow us to implement these accesses very quickly and manage them very simply.”

Teleport is a cloud-native platform providing PAM through zero trust principles and cryptographic identities. It unifies access across SSH, Kubernetes, databases, web apps, and cloud environments.
Main Features:
Price: Free trial. Pricing is by inquiry.
Review: “Reviewers highlight centralized access management for SSH, Kubernetes, AWS, and RDS as a standout efficiency.”

Netwrix’s offering is a PAM platform that replaces standing privileges with just-in-time, ephemeral access. It delivers privileged account discovery, time-limited credentials, real-time session monitoring, and secure remote access without requiring VPNs.
Main Features
Price: By inquiry
Review: “[Netwrix is] always very responsive and helpful every time we have an issue. The product itself is also very easy to use.”
Identity-based attacks are rising faster than traditional defenses can adapt, and you can’t afford to expose privileged accounts (human or machine). Modern PAM solutions offer an automation lifeline, cutting down investigation time and providing the audit trails needed for compliance.
In a world where machine identities outnumber humans and attackers exploit every overlooked credential, Apono delivers a safer and more scalable way to manage privileged access. Get started with Apono today and see how modern PAM can protect your organization without slowing down your teams.
Unlike legacy PAM platforms that rely on static roles, Apono takes a cloud-native, JIT approach. By automating the issuance and revocation of privileges down to individual databases, APIs, or Kubernetes clusters, Apono eliminates standing access and dramatically reduces attack surfaces. Developers can request access through Slack, Teams, or CLI, while security teams gain full visibility through comprehensive audit logs and compliance-ready reporting.
Before you choose a solution, see how security leaders evaluate Privileged Access Management platforms built for the AI era. Download the Apono Access Platform Buyer’s Guide to learn what differentiates modern, cloud-native PAM from legacy vault-based tools—and how to choose the right platform for your organization.