Privileged access solutions are often evaluated on control strength and connectivity. Can they broker access? Can they restrict entry points? Can they capture activity?
Those questions matter. But they overlook something that ultimately determines whether least privilege holds in practice.
Does the system make it easy for engineers to get the right access, at the right time, without friction?
Because if it does not, behavior adapts.
Engineers are problem solvers. When access becomes an obstacle instead of an enabler, they optimize around it. That is where developer experience becomes a security issue.
Engineers usually know what they need to accomplish. The friction begins when translating that goal into the right access request inside a privileged access solution.
In many environments, the privileged access solution becomes another system engineers must navigate rather than an extension of their workflow.
That friction tends to show up in familiar ways:
Individually, these issues seem minor. Repeated enough times, they shape behavior.
If a privileged access solution makes requesting access uncertain or disruptive, engineers begin asking for broader access up front to avoid getting blocked later. Certainty starts to outweigh precision.
That drift does not begin with weak policy.
It begins with friction inside the privileged access solution itself.
StrongDM is built around proxying and brokering connections to infrastructure. That approach can be effective for controlling entry points into databases, clusters, and servers.
However, its access model relies heavily on predefined access constructs.
Permissions and mappings must be created in advance, and engineers must know which access definition applies to their task.
In modern cloud environments, that alignment rarely stays perfect for long.
When definitions are too narrow, engineers get blocked and must submit additional requests. When definitions are broadened to reduce friction, they stop being tightly scoped. The tension between usability and least privilege becomes ongoing rather than occasional.
Over time, predictable patterns emerge:
Engineers increasingly expect access to fit into the tools they already use. Slack, CLI, internal developer portals, and AI-driven interfaces are now part of daily engineering life. A modern privileged access solution should integrate directly into those workflows — not sit outside of them.
In many StrongDM deployments, Slack-based workflows are not universally available and are typically tied to enterprise-tier plans. For many teams, the privileged access solution still requires stepping into a separate interface to request access.
During routine work, that extra step may be manageable. During production incidents, it becomes disruptive because it forces context switching at exactly the wrong time.
StrongDM also does not provide MCP integrations or AI-assisted request guidance. Engineers are expected to know exactly what resource and permission level they need. The privileged access solution does not assist in translating intent into the right scope.
When engineers are unsure which resource or permission set maps to their task within the privileged access solution, the process turns into trial and error.
They request access, realize it is insufficient, and resubmit.
To avoid repeating that loop, they begin asking for broader access up front, preferring certainty over precision.
Each extra step pulls them further out of their workflow and makes over-requesting feel like the safer option.
Over time, friction inside the privileged access solution shapes behavior. Engineers optimize for speed and predictability instead of least privilege — not because they disregard security, but because the access experience makes precision harder than it needs to be.
Ready to see how a modern privileged access solution compares? Evaluate Apono vs. StrongDM in our side-by-side comparison.
Apono keeps the same foundational principle. Access must be requested. Guardrails must exist. Privileges must expire.
The difference is how the experience is delivered.
Engineers can interact with Apono through Slack, Teams, CLI, Backstage, a dedicated portal, and AI-driven interfaces including MCP integrations. The request process happens inside the workflow instead of outside it.
When engineers are unsure what to request, the system provides guidance. Instead of forcing users to translate intent into a precise permission set under pressure, Apono helps map goals to the appropriate scope.
Access is dynamically provisioned at runtime under policy guardrails rather than relying solely on static, pre-created definitions. Privileges align closely with the task at hand and expire automatically when the work is done.
If work runs longer than expected, extensions can occur within policy without forcing engineers to restart the request process. That reduces the incentive to ask for longer or broader access up front.
The result is not a looser system. It is a system engineers are more likely to use correctly.
At their core, engineers are problem solvers. If getting the right access they need to achieve their goals becomes a problem, then they will find ways around it.
It is up to security teams to put in place the tools and processes that will enable engineers to move faster without compromising on their security priorities. When requests are intuitive, guided, and time-bound by design, least privilege becomes practical instead of aspirational.
If you’re currently using StrongDM, the question isn’t whether it brokers access.
It’s whether it eliminates standing privilege without creating workflow friction.
Book a 30-minute Session to evaluate your privileged access solution:
🎁 Qualified StrongDM customers receive a $200 Amazon gift card after completing the session.

Today, we’re excited to announce that Apono Assistant is now available in Slack.
Apono Assistant is Apono’s AI-powered access assistant, built to help engineers request the right Just-in-Time access using natural language — especially in the moments where access forms fall short and users aren’t sure what to request.
Now, that same AI experience is available directly in Slack, so engineers can get the access they need without leaving the tools they already rely on every day.
Access forms work great when requests are repeatable and users know exactly what they need. But the most painful access moments are the ones that aren’t repeatable — when a user is blocked by an error and doesn’t know which resource or permission level will fix it.
That’s when users start guessing:
And when users guess, the outcomes are rarely ideal. They either:
The result: more friction for engineers, more overhead for admins, and more risk for security teams.
Apono Assistant was designed to solve one core problem: users often don’t know what to request.
When users can’t translate intent into a precise request, access workflows slow down and organizations end up with more “give me admin” requests driven by frustration rather than actual need.
Using Apono Assistant in Slack is simple:
Once the request is created, it connects to the same request and notification experience users already get today so they can easily track what they requested and what’s pending.
Traditional access request forms are great when requests are repeatable. Which is usually when users know exactly what they need and want the same thing every time.
When forms fail, the access experience becomes slower and noisier and least privilege breaks down.
Apono Assistant closes that gap.
Because it’s built with a “DevOps brain,” the assistant can help users understand:
This helps organizations reduce risk by making it easier to do the right thing:
At the same time, it reduces the burden on admins by handling many of the “what should I request?” questions that otherwise become manual overhead.
Slack is only the beginning.
We’re working on bringing Apono Assistant — our AI layer for access — into more tools engineers love and rely on, including the CLI. The goal is simple: wherever engineers work, Apono should be there to help them request the right Just-in-Time access quickly, safely, and without friction.
Access should be fast when it needs to be — and precise when it matters most.
Apono Assistant in Slack helps engineers request the right Just-in-Time access using natural language, directly where they already work. It reduces guesswork, minimizes overly broad requests, and keeps access scoped, time-bound, and fully auditable.
If you’re looking to reduce admin overhead, eliminate unnecessary standing privileges, and make least privilege easier to follow in practice — not just in policy — we’d love to show you how it works.
Book a demo to see Apono Assistant in Slack in action and explore how AI can streamline access across your organization.
This week, we released our 2026 State of Agentic AI Risk Report, a global survey of 250 senior cybersecurity leaders examining how enterprises are approaching agentic AI as it moves closer to production.
The findings point to a clear reality. While AI agents are advancing quickly, security leaders are deliberately slowing adoption. In fact, 98% of respondents say security and data concerns have already slowed deployments, added scrutiny, or reduced the scope of agentic AI initiatives.
This is not resistance to innovation. It is a response to risk.
To product and engineering teams, agentic AI represents acceleration. Agents can deploy infrastructure, triage incidents, modify configurations, and interact directly with production systems. The productivity upside is undeniable.
From the CISO’s perspective, the question is different: what happens when autonomous systems inherit today’s privilege sprawl?
In our study, 100% of respondents agreed that an attack targeting agentic AI workflows would be more damaging than a traditional cyberattack. That level of alignment reflects a shared understanding that automation multiplies both efficiency and impact.
If a human with excessive privileges can cause damage, an autonomous system with the same privileges can do so faster and at greater scale.
Recent events have reinforced those concerns.
According to reporting by Engadget, a 13-hour AWS outage was reportedly triggered by Amazon’s own internal AI tools making unintended changes to production systems. Regardless of the technical specifics, the lesson is clear. When AI-driven systems operate directly in live environments without tightly scoped guardrails, the consequences can ripple quickly.
For CISOs, this was not surprising. It validated what many already believed: autonomous systems are not just another application layer. They are actors with privileges. And poorly governed privileges create outsized risk.
The slowdown in adoption becomes clearer when viewed through a readiness lens.
Only 21% of organizations in our study say they feel prepared to manage attacks involving agentic AI or autonomous workflows. That gap between ambition and operational readiness is fueling concern around agentic AI risk at the executive level.
Security leaders are not evaluating AI in isolation. They are assessing it against environments already strained by accumulated privilege and fragmented visibility. Over time, human and non-human identities have accrued access well beyond actual usage. Cloud policies are scattered across platforms. Standing permissions persist long after their purpose has expired.
Within that reality, agentic AI risk is not hypothetical. It is structural.
Autonomous agents operate at machine speed. When introduced into environments burdened with excessive standing access, they amplify the impact of every overprivileged role and every blind spot in visibility. The blast radius does not grow incrementally. It expands exponentially.
Agentic AI does not create entirely new categories of risk. It accelerates and scales the identity and access weaknesses that already exist.
That is the foundation CISOs are being asked to trust.
The hesitation we’re seeing is not about stopping AI adoption. It is about redefining the privilege model that supports it.
Security leaders recognize that agentic AI risk is not just a model accuracy issue. It is an access issue. When autonomous systems operate with standing privileges, the blast radius expands exponentially.
CISOs are looking for a structural shift in how access is granted and governed. The conversation is moving from patching entitlements to redesigning guardrails.
At a strategic level, that shift looks like this:
This is not a tooling adjustment. It is a mindset change.
Agents should not inherit permanent authority. They should operate within clearly defined boundaries, receiving the minimum access necessary to complete a defined objective, with automatic revocation built in.
When those guardrails are in place, autonomy becomes sustainable. Without them, caution is not only rational, it is responsible.
Agentic AI is forcing organizations to confront identity and privilege gaps that have existed for years. The difference now is speed. What was previously manageable human risk becomes amplified when systems can act independently and continuously.
The friction reported by 98% of respondents between accelerating AI adoption and meeting cybersecurity priorities is not a philosophical disagreement. It is a signal that legacy privilege models were not built for autonomy.
Organizations that invest now in reducing standing privileges and implementing dynamic, intent-aware access controls will be positioned to move forward with confidence. Those that do not will continue to hesitate as AI initiatives approach production.
The agentic future is not on hold. It is waiting for the right guardrails.
The 2026 State of Agentic AI Risk Report reveals:
If AI agents are entering your environment this year, your privilege model must evolve with them.

A handful of services quietly redeploy. No one directly manages the traditional network perimeter. But somewhere along the way, an API key ends up in the wrong place. The reality of modern cloud security is that new identities are created fast, and permissions are granted broadly to keep things moving.
Over time, these permissions collect unused rights and drift away from least privilege. APIs get abused through over-privileged identities, long-lived credentials, and permissions nobody remembers approving.
In fact, the numbers reflect what many teams already feel. 57% of organizations experienced an API-related data breach in the past two years, and 73% of those victims suffered three or more incidents. Modern cloud identity management can’t stop at human users. It must treat non-human identities with the same context and Zero Trust mindset, because nowadays, they’re the ones doing most of the work.
Cloud identity management is the process of controlling who and what can access cloud resources, under what conditions, and for how long.
It covers both authentication (proving an identity) and authorization (what that identity can do) across cloud platforms, SaaS apps, APIs, and infrastructure. Unlike on-premises IAM, where servers and users tend to remain stable, cloud environments change constantly.
Static roles and quarterly reviews don’t cut it. Identity and access management needs to be driven by policy and enforced as things happen. The challenge is that most activity in the cloud comes from non-human identities (NHIs), such as service accounts, workload roles (including Kubernetes service accounts), API tokens, and CI/CD identities. They’re easy to over-provision and often never cleaned up. Unlike humans, NHIs cannot perform Multi-Factor Authentication. If an API key for an NHI is stolen, the attacker has immediate access.
It’s also how permission sprawl sneaks in. A CI/CD job is granted broad permissions to ship something once, and months later, it’s still running with the same access (even though nobody has thought about that project in ages).
When you manage cloud identity well, access becomes time-bound, contextual, and auditable. The goal is straightforward: enforce least privilege continuously, and make elevated access expire by default.
As cloud environments sprawl across accounts, services, and pipelines, identity becomes the easiest way in. Once inside, attackers often use over-permissioned identities to move laterally across cloud accounts. Long-lived access keys and static workload roles make this especially dangerous. Compromised credentials may remain valid for months without detection, which underscores the value of protecting CI/CD pipelines.
Getting rid of standing access matters more than betting you’ll never leak a key. The problem is, most teams still manage access through tickets and manual approvals. DevOps becomes the bottleneck, and people start taking shortcuts just to ship.
A big part of the mess comes from NHIs. CI jobs, bots, API keys, and workload roles are often given “temporary” access to unblock work, but the permissions remain because nobody owns the cleanup. If you want identity controls that actually hold up at cloud scale, NHIs need owners, guardrails, and regular review just like human users. In offensive security, non-human identities are especially attractive targets because they often carry broad, unattended access.
The better model is time-bound, contextual access that’s easy to audit. When requests and approvals are automated with clear policies, access becomes consistent and predictable. Engineers get what they need without turning security into a ticket queue.

There is a saying that goes “you can’t secure what you can’t see.” In most cloud environments, identity data is typically fragmented across cloud providers, SaaS tools, CI/CD systems, and internal platforms. Human users are only a small part of the picture.
Centralizing identity visibility brings all identities into a single control plane, making it clear who or what has access to which resources, and why. This clarity forms the very foundation of detecting over-privilege, identifying dormant access, and responding quickly when something appears to be wrong. Unlike spreadsheet-based access tracking, centralized visibility gives you real-time answers.
You can implement centralized identity visibility by creating an inventory of all human users and NHIs and assigning ownership to each. Inventory should pull data from cloud IAM systems, Kubernetes clusters, CI/CD platforms, SaaS tools, and secrets managers. With this data, you’ll be able to flag unused permissions and continuously monitor for newly created identities.
Standing access may be convenient, but it’s also one of the biggest sources of risk in cloud environments. Long-lived permissions dramatically increase blast radius when credentials are compromised.
Just-in-time (JIT) access flips the model on its head. Permissions are granted only when needed and expire automatically. JIT relies on short-lived credentials rather than static keys, reducing the window of exposure if access is misused.
You can reduce the attack surface by default while also aligning with zero-trust principles. Cloud-native access management platforms make time-bound access the norm rather than an exception.
The same model applies to non-human identities, such as CI jobs and workload roles. Rather than “permanent admin just in case,” JIT makes elevated access an exception with an expiration time.
You do not “finish” least privilege. Cloud environments are constantly evolving, and their access requirements change accordingly. Hence, high-performing teams treat least privilege as an ongoing process as part of a Zero Trust operating model.
Cloud native access management platforms make refining policies and adjusting permissions manageable. Time-bound and context-aware controls keep least privilege current as infrastructure changes.

Manual access approvals slow everyone down. There are tickets piling up, engineers waiting in line, and security teams gatekeeping rather than partnering.
Automated access workflows remove this friction. All it takes is policy-driven approvals and self-service requests to get engineers the access they need without bypassing controls.
As a solution, Apono enables this through native integrations with tools like Slack, Microsoft Teams, and CLI workflows, so access requests fit naturally into how teams already work. Compared to ticket queues, self-serve workflows are faster and easier to govern.
Not all access requests carry the same risk. Risk signals may include unusual access times, unfamiliar locations, untrusted devices, or requests targeting production resources.
For example, production access should be stricter than staging. On-call engineers shouldn’t be evaluated the same way as interns.
Context-aware policies use role, environment, time, and risk signals to decide what’s allowed. That keeps controls strong where they matter, without slowing work everywhere else.
Non-human identities now dominate cloud environments, and they’re often the least controlled. Static permissions assigned to workload identities become dangerous as systems evolve.
It’s vital to onboard non-human identities with fine-grained, time-bound entitlements. Workload identities receive only the permissions they need, only when they need them. This best practice significantly reduces long-term exposure while preserving automation.
Every non-human identity should have a clear owner, defined purpose, and expiration policy. Permissions should be reviewed whenever pipelines change or services are decommissioned to prevent orphaned identities from persisting indefinitely. Treat NHIs like production infrastructure: provision, monitor, rotate, and retire on purpose; NHI management makes the biggest difference here.

Security controls that live outside developer workflows are often ignored or bypassed. Effective cloud identity management meets developers where they are.
Cloud-native integrations and API-driven access controls allow identity governance to scale alongside infrastructure automation. When access requests, approvals, and audits are integrated into CI/CD pipelines and chat tools, compliance becomes a natural byproduct of normal work, rather than an additional task.
The most effective implementation best practice is to enforce identity policies directly within CI/CD pipelines, ensuring that access decisions align with deployment automation.
Emergencies happen. The goal isn’t to block access, but to control it. Break-glass access allows engineers to respond quickly during incidents while maintaining accountability. Well-designed on-call and emergency flows ensure access is temporary, logged, and reviewed after the fact. This best practice strikes a balance between speed and governance. Break-glass keeps emergency access fast, scoped, and auditable.
Without automation, permissions drift is inevitable. Continuous auditing keeps access aligned with policy over time. Audit logs should capture who requested access, why it was approved, what changed, and when access expired or was revoked. Taking these steps simplifies the collection process for audits such as SOC 2, GDPR, HIPAA, and CCPA.
Zero Trust should be viewed as an operating model, rather than a product, where every request is treated as untrusted until proven otherwise. Zero-trust verification should be continuous, incorporating identity, device, and workload trust, as well as real-time risk signals.
Every access request must be verified, scoped, and time-bound, regardless of its origin. Applying zero-trust principles across multi-cloud and SaaS environments ensures identity remains the security perimeter everywhere, not just on paper. This approach reflects the shift beyond the traditional perimeter, where every request is evaluated on context rather than network location. When combined with automation and visibility, Zero Trust strengthens security without slowing teams down.
Cloud security doesn’t fail because teams don’t care. It fails because identity has outgrown the tools and processes built to manage it.
Human and non-human identities now drive every deployment, every API call, and every production change. Treating access as static infrastructure in a dynamic cloud is no longer defensible.
Apono was designed to solve this gap between cloud scale and access control. By automating just-in-time access, eliminating standing permissions, and applying zero-trust principles across human and non-human identities, Apono helps teams regain control of cloud access without slowing engineers down. That means fewer tickets, fewer permanent privileges, and cleaner audit trails by default.
Ready to eliminate standing access, reduce identity risk, and keep developers moving fast? Book a demo with Apono and see how cloud-native, just-in-time access works in under 15 minutes.
Report finds growing tension between AI acceleration goals and security readiness as autonomous systems move toward production
NEW YORK — February 2026 — Apono, the cloud-native Privilege Access Management platform securing human and agent identities, today released The 2026 State of Agentic AI Cyber Risk Report, a global study examining how enterprises are approaching agentic AI adoption amid rising security concerns. The report finds that while organizations broadly believe in the potential of AI agents and autonomous systems, security readiness is emerging as a primary constraint on scale.
The findings are based on a global survey of 250 senior cybersecurity professionals from organizations with 250 or more employees across North America, Europe, and the Middle East and Africa. The research was conducted in December 2025 by an independent market research firm and focused on how security and technical leaders assess risk, readiness, and accountability as agentic AI moves closer to production environments.
The report highlights a growing tension inside organizations as agentic AI moves closer to production. While executive and technical leadership often champion AI agents as a driver of efficiency and competitive advantage, accountability for AI-related cyber risk remains concentrated with CISOs and security teams — placing security leaders in the role of gatekeepers.
“Cybersecurity leaders are actively slowing agentic AI adoption,” said Rom Carmel, CEO and co-founder of Apono. “There’s a lot of talk about AI agents rapidly taking over enterprise workflows, but the data in our report shows that this simply isn’t the case. On the ground, CISOs are pressing the brakes.”
Ofir Stein, CTO and co-founder of Apono, added: “Organizations are still struggling to secure human access at scale. Expecting CISOs to greenlight broad autonomy to agents without mature identity and access controls in place isn’t realistic. Until those foundations are in place — and our data shows they largely aren’t — agentic AI deployment will continue to be deliberately constrained, regardless of current industry sentiment.”
Key findings from the report include:
These findings stand in contrast to broader market narratives suggesting rapid, near-term replacement of traditional software by AI agents. While experimentation with agentic AI is underway across many organizations, the report shows that CISOs are pressing the brakes as systems approach production, citing the need for stronger controls around identity, access, and permissions before autonomy can safely scale.
While agentic AI capabilities continue to advance with the adoption of LLMs acting on behalf of engineers, and enterprise adoption patterns evolve, the report underscores a clear takeaway: organizations are not rejecting AI agents, but they are demanding stronger security foundations. Addressing long-standing gaps in identity governance, privileged access, and visibility is increasingly viewed as a prerequisite for confident, sustained adoption.
The 2026 State of Agentic AI Cyber Risk Report is available on Apono’s website. Download your copy here to explore the full findings.

Apono provides Zero Standing Privilege access for cloud infrastructure, databases, Kubernetes, SaaS, and operational resources. By automating access privilege provisioning based on intent, risk, and operational context, Apono helps organizations such as Intel, HPE, and Workday enforce Zero Trust without slowing down engineering, operations, or incident response.
Picture this: it’s 2am, your pager goes off, and you’re staring at a production database that’s on fire. You know exactly what’s wrong. You know exactly how to fix it. But you can’t touch anything because you’re waiting on someone to approve your access request.
Meanwhile, your customers are down, your SLAs are bleeding out, and you’re refreshing Slack, and every minute you spend waiting is another minute of damage you could’ve prevented.
This is the incident response tax that too many teams pay. The frustrating gap between needing access and having access, a gap that costs real money in downtime and erodes customer trust.
That’s exactly why incident.io and Apono built this integration together. Now you’re never stuck waiting when customers are counting on you.
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: most organizations handle incident access in ways that are either insecure, slow, or both.
None of these actually solve the problem.
What you need is access that appears exactly when you need it, scoped to exactly what you need, and disappears the moment you don’t.
The integration connects incident.io’s understanding of who’s on call with Apono’s ability to dynamically provision and revoke access. The result is Just-in-Time access with least-privilege permissions that’s tied directly to your incident response workflow.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
This translates directly to the metrics that matter.
incident.io removes friction from incident response. Apono makes secure access instant and automatic. Together, we’ve built a system where the fast way and the secure way are the same way.
The Apono + incident.io integration is available now for customers of both platforms.
Check out the incident.io documentation and Apono’s documentation to configure the integration, or schedule a demo to see what modern incident response looks like.
incident.io is the all-in-one AI platform for on-call, incident response, and status pages. It’s the incident command center built for fast-moving teams.
So you’ve got a groundbreaking product that has outstanding market fit. Your prospects love it and are raring to buy. Amazing. But before they can hit approve on the order, they need to make sure you’re SOC 2 or ISO 27001 compliant because their compliance officer won’t let them work with any vendor that hasn’t passed their audit. This is the joy of selling to regulated customers — which today, let’s be honest, is almost everyone. If you handle, process, or integrate with sensitive data, your buyers are going to hold you to a higher security standard.
And if your access practices don’t measure up, you don’t just put yourself at risk — you put them at risk. So how do you show that your security is enterprise-grade?
Yes, healthcare, banking, and insurance are the obvious regulated industries. But in reality, almost every organization that collects, stores, or transmits personal or sensitive data falls under some kind of regulation.
That means your prospects might range from a fintech startup processing payments to an e-commerce brand storing customer addresses, or even a SaaS that integrates with payroll or HR data.
If they handle regulated data, you need to prove that you can protect it.

No matter which regulation your buyer cites, the core controls are the same. Auditors want to see that access is limited to what’s needed, granted only when required, and fully traceable. If you can show these basics are operational every day, you’re already speaking their language.

For your buyers, vendors are often their biggest exposure point. Attackers increasingly target the supply chain — the third-party vendors, tools, and integrations that connect into their systems. If one of your privileged accounts or API tokens is compromised, an attacker can use it as a doorway into your customer’s environment. Even if the breach happens on your side, your customer takes the hit.
This is exactly what we saw in the Salesloft-Drift supply chain breach — and why access security now dominates vendor assessments.
In August 2025, attackers from UNC6395 compromised OAuth tokens used by Drift, an AI chat tool integrated with Salesloft. Those tokens granted access to customer systems like Salesforce, exposing data such as AWS keys and Snowflake tokens. The impact? Over 700 organizations were affected, and the breach spread across connected platforms including Google Workspace, Slack, AWS, and Microsoft Azure.
The lesson is simple: even trusted integrations can become attack vectors if access isn’t temporary, scoped, and auditable.
Compliance is what turns security from a “nice-to-have” into a deal-breaker.
If your customer is audited and their vendors don’t meet the same standards, they fail. That’s why many buyers won’t even begin procurement until they see SOC 2, ISO 27001, or HIPAA-aligned controls in place. It’s the transitive property of compliance: your security posture becomes theirs.
The moment you process regulated data, you’re inside your customer’s compliance scope. Expect detailed security questionnaires, proof of least-privilege enforcement, and visibility into how you manage privileged accounts, contractors, and integrations.
Buyers want evidence that:
These aren’t just security best practices. They’re now procurement requirements.
SOC 2 or ISO 27001 certification is no longer a differentiator; it’s table stakes. What stands out is your ability to demonstrate continuous control and operational maturity, not once-a-year audits.
The easiest way to win over risk and compliance teams is to make their job easier. Offer a trust portal, share policies and certifications, and clearly explain how your access controls protect their data. Transparency accelerates approvals.
Regulated customers are wary of access models that rely on exceptions, one-off approvals, or manual workarounds to function in production. Even if individual exceptions are justified, they erode confidence in the control environment and create audit risk over time.
To pass compliance reviews, companies must show that privileged access is handled consistently through policy, not through ad-hoc decisions — with the same rules applied across users, environments, and systems.
If you’re trying to close enterprise or regulated deals, you need to show that your access security is airtight — not just once, but every day. That’s exactly what Apono enables.
With Apono, you can walk into any regulated customer conversation knowing you can prove least privilege, auditable access, and modern compliance.
Because when you sell into regulated industries, the deal doesn’t hinge only on your product — it hinges on your security. And with Apono, you’ve got both.
When security becomes part of the sales conversation, you need more than certifications. You need proof that your access controls are continuous, enforced, and audit-ready in real environments.
Apono helps you:
Don’t let access risk slow down your next enterprise deal.
At some point, something bad always happens. Incidents like NHI sprawl and data ownership are always preventable. A supply chain attack finds its way either through upstream infiltration or downstream delivery. However, despite being aware of this, the problem persists.
54% of large organizations see supply chain challenges as a barrier to cyber resilience. There is complexity and interdependency among different systems, software, and teams that require access to one another. When security is lax in one instance, it creates a potential point of attack for the entire system.
It’s the weakest link at play. Data governance exists to identify access weak points and actively eliminate them before standing permissions and unmanaged identities turn into an attack path.
Data governance defines and orchestrates who can access data, for what purpose, under what conditions, and how that access is monitored and audited. It governs data throughout its entire lifecycle, from creation to deletion, to form the basis of identity and access governance. For DevOps teams, it must be enforced directly at the access layer through automation and Just-In-Time controls, rather than being discovered after the fact through audits.
As cloud environments scale, non-human identities (NHIs) such as service accounts, CI/CD runners, workload identities, and AI agents now outnumber human users in many organizations.
When these identities are over-permissioned, long-lived, or lack clear ownership, they become standing access paths that bypass governance entirely and expand blast radius by default. Token sprawl and unmanaged credentials dramatically expand the attack surface and enable lateral movement if a single identity is compromised, making non-human identities a high-impact vector for modern cyber threats.
| Discipline | Key Question | Primary Focus |
| Governance | Who decides, and what are the rules? | Strategy, Policy, Accountability |
| Management | How do we move and store it? | Operations, Integration, Storage |
| Security | How do we block intruders? | Encryption, Defense, Hardening |
| IAM | Is this the right user? | Identity, Authentication, Permissions |
| Compliance | Are we meeting the law? | Legal mandates, External Audits |
Centralized identity registries and least-privilege policies only work effectively when paired with Just-In-Time (JIT) access and automated access control, which automatically grants and revokes permissions. In this way, you can directly address common NHI failure modes such as token sprawl and unclear ownership.
Enforcing time-bound, purpose-specific access aligns data governance with regulatory requirements, including GDPR, HIPAA, and ISO 27001. Both human and non-human identities can access only the data required for a specific task, therefore supporting internal control and data minimization requirements by default.
When you eliminate standing access, data governance becomes audit-ready by design. Every permission is time-limited and logged automatically for faster root-cause analysis and clear evidence of why access controls prevented an incident.
In cloud-native environments dominated by non-human identities, data governance is unenforceable without JIT because standing permissions erase ownership, purpose, and auditability by default.

Clear data ownership and accountability are the formal assignment of authority and responsibility for specific individuals or teams. Ownership makes access traceable, and accountability ensures compliance with regulations such as GDPR and HIPAA.
Least privilege gives the absolute minimum permissions required to perform the specific, scoped task. The core concept behind least privilege is that access is denied to everything by default and permission is incrementally added as needed. Purpose-based access adds context to least-privilege by creating the scope for existence and justification behind the request for access.
Least-privilege and time-bound access are especially critical at the database layer, where over-permissioned credentials are a common source of data exposure. Automating secure database access with just-in-time permissions gives developers and services the ability to query sensitive data only when required, and only for the exact scope of their task.

Time-bound aligns with the principle of Just-In-Time (JIT) access, which restricts data available to specific periods or pre-defined durations, resulting in automatic revocation. Context-aware access evaluates the reason for access based on environmental and situational signals.
These mechanisms are core to Zero Trust architectures, which assume continuous identity verification, short-lived access, and strong governance over both human and non-human identities to protect cloud data security at scale.
Data classification is the systematic process of categorizing information based on its sensitivity, allowing access policies, encryption requirements, and approval workflows to be enforced consistently according to risk level. This allows organizations to prioritize security measures such as MFA for high-risk data.
Sensitivity awareness is the process of implementing and maintaining a ‘privacy-first’ culture, where every employee understands their role in data protection and can be used to prevent accidental exposure through the use of AI tools.
Data traceability is the ability to follow a piece of data through its entire lifecycle. Auditability refers to the ability to verify that data governance policies were implemented correctly. These two factors matter, as traceability helps with the verification of evidence that your governance rules were implemented.

Manual governance often relies on spreadsheets, static PDF policies, and human-led stewardship. This approach can lead to critical failure points, including human error, scalability gaps, and outdated information. Automation must extend beyond data discovery to the access layer, ensuring permissions are granted dynamically and continuously aligned with purpose and risk.

Codify policies to replace manuals with Policy-as-Code (PAC) so rules are version-controlled and deterministic. This approach will shift left governance checks to block non-compliant infrastructures before they are ever deployed. Automating guardrails, such as cloud-native Service Control Policies (SCPs), will establish hard boundaries to prevent users from performing prohibited actions.
Use identity governance software to grant temporary and task-specific permissions that expire automatically for JIT access and ensure least privilege. Restrict resources to specific geographical regions for data sovereignty and accountability. Mandate Customer Managed Keys (CMK) for all data-at-rest and block any storage bucket creation that uses a default provider-managed encryption for confidentiality and automated encryption.
Use a Zero Standing Privileges (ZSP) model so no human or non-human identity retains access by default, reducing lateral movement and limiting supply chain risks when one system or dependency is compromised.
When access is required, use Attribute-Based Access Control (ABAC), which grants access based on contextual attributes and, when paired with centralized policy management, avoids the role explosion and policy sprawl common in static RBAC. ABAC checks the subject, resource, action, and environmental attributes to determine accessibility rather than just belonging to a particular group.
Don’t use ‘forever’ keys with non-human identities such as service accounts and AI agents. Instead, use workload identity federation, which allows pipelines to exchange short-lived, verifiable tokens for cloud access. Treat CI/CD runners like privileged users and only grant elevated permissions during tightly scoped deployment windows, with automatic revocation and full audit trails once the task completes. For legacy systems that require passwords, use a centralized vault to automate rotation and monitor for machine anomalies to trigger automated revocation.
Pre-configure highly privileged roles (e.g., Emergency-Admin) that remain inactive and locked during normal operations, and use ABAC so these roles can only be activated if specific environmental conditions are met. The moment a “Break Glass” procedure begins, the organization must go on high alert. Check for a high-fidelity trail during this event for traceability.
Security failures rarely come from a single misconfiguration. They come from unmanaged access that quietly accumulates over time. In cloud- and supply-chain-heavy environments, resilience depends on eliminating unnecessary access before it becomes an entry point, rather than reacting after the fact.
Apono is built on the principle that identity is the new perimeter. Instead of relying on standing privileges, every human user and NHI gets just-enough access, just-in-time, and only for a clearly defined purpose.
Data governance starts with ownership, but it only works when it’s enforced automatically. Apono turns governance from policy into practice by eliminating standing access, automating approvals, and providing audit-ready visibility across your entire stack. Book a live demo and eliminate standing permissions across your entire stack without slowing developers down.
In 2026, you’re not just managing clusters and pipelines; you are managing the risk associated with the data flowing through them. As environments become decentralized and agentic, traditional, static data governance policies have morphed from inefficient to a security liability.
The financial stakes of data governance failures have reached an all-time high. The average cost of a data breach in the United States has reached $10.22 million. For cloud-native teams, 72% of these breaches now involve data stored in cloud environments, often spanning multiple environments where fragmented access controls create easy paths for lateral movement.
The core issue is not a lack of policy, but a lack of operationalization. Most enterprise policies are static PDFs that bear little resemblance to how engineering teams actually work. If you consider that roughly 30% of breaches now involve third-party or supply-chain compromises, and many AI-related security incidents stem from identity and access control failures, the conclusion is unavoidable. Policy must evolve from a set of suggestions in a document into a comprehensive code-driven enforcement layer.
A data governance policy is the foundational blueprint that defines how your organization’s information assets are managed, utilized, and protected. It establishes the internal rules and accountability models required to ensure data remains a reliable asset.
Unlike a data governance framework (which provides the structural methodology), the policy serves as the legal and operational mandate. It converts high-level strategic goals into concrete requirements for data handling, access, and auditing across the entire data lifecycle.
In practice, a data governance policy is not owned by a single team. In modern cloud environments, collaboration among data owners, security, compliance, and execs ensures that data governance extends to human users and non-human identities (NHIs), such as service accounts and autonomous agents, that access data independently. In modern cloud environments, data governance policies increasingly rely on identity governance software to enforce accountability across both humans and NHIs.

While data governance and data management are often used interchangeably in boardrooms, they represent distinct functional layers in the DevOps stack. In a nutshell: Management builds the pipelines, security locks the valves, and data governance decides who gets the key and why. Crucially, enforcement for all three applies equally to human users and NHIs.
| Primary Focus | Objective | |
| Data Governance | Strategy & Oversight | Establishing who can do what with which data under what conditions. |
| Data Security | Protection & Defense | Implementing the technical controls (encryption, firewalls, IAM, etc) to prevent unauthorized access. |
| Data Management | Execution & Logistics | The daily architecture of ingesting, storing, and processing data for operational use. |
Gone are the simple days of network perimeter security and database firewalls. Today, the primary attack surface has shifted to the identity fabric. Machine identities already outnumber human accounts and are growing rapidly year over year. The risk from ungoverned NHIs often exceeds that of a single compromised employee device, significantly expanding organizational threat exposure across cloud environments.
Regulators are highly aware of the changes introduced by the shift to the new agentic era of computing. The EU AI Act and updated NIST frameworks have moved from principle to enforceable accountability. Organizations must now prove not only that they have a policy, but that their policy is programmatically enforced. Governance is the enabler of resilient, machine-led operations, underpinning trust in data-driven decision making.
A modern policy must define its boundaries to prevent governance sprawl. In decentralized environments, the scope must extend beyond traditional databases to include every S3 bucket, vector store, and API endpoint that touches sensitive data.
What it Entails:
How to Implement:
Define scope at the resource level and use automated discovery tools to continuously map new resources to the policy.
This is the accountability layer. Without a clear human owner for every identity, you cannot verify intent or conduct a meaningful forensic audit after a breach.
What it Entails:
Assigning every service account, API key, and AI agent to a human Data Owner or Custodian responsible for its entire lifecycle.
How to Implement:
Transition to a self-service access model where owners define automated approval workflows and use Just-in-Time (JIT) provisioning to fulfill duties.
Classification is the logic layer that categorizes information based on sensitivity (Public, Internal, Confidential, Restricted).
What it Entails:
How to Implement:
Deploy automated discovery tools that use AI-powered data classification to apply metadata-driven labels as code, integrating them directly into access controls.

The data access policy defines the technical mechanisms for entry by specifying rules governing how permissions can be requested and granted. Your data access policy is your primary defense against identity debt.
What it Entails:
How to Implement:
Retire static, long-lived roles in favor of a JIT architecture. Inventory standing privileges and replace permanent admin rights with ephemeral, scoped credentials.
The data usage policy establishes the rules of engagement by defining exactly what an identity is permitted to do with data once access to it is granted. While access addresses the entry, usage prevents scope creep and unauthorized repurposing.
What it Entails:
How to Implement:
Link permissions to specific task windows. JIT access enforces time-bounded usage and significantly reduces post-task misuse.
Data quality standards are the technical benchmarks that ensure data is fit for purpose. Without enforceable quality controls, organizations risk scaling bad decisions faster through analytics and AI.
What it Entails:
Implementation (and The Apono Edge):
Integrate data observability directly into the pipeline. Apono can support this model by granting temporary, elevated permissions when investigation or remediation is required.

Managing the temporal dimension of data is a strategic necessity for minimizing the liability surface. Retaining data longer than required increases breach impact and audit complexity, often without delivering any business value.
What it Entails:
How to Implement:
Logging and monitoring provide the uninterrupted visibility required to transform a static policy into a defensible security posture. Organizations must maintain an immutable, near real-time trail of every access decision to satisfy regulatory defensible governance requirements.
What it Entails:
How to Implement:
Incident response is a governance function as much as a security one. It determines how quickly an organization can contain, investigate, and recover from unauthorized data exposure or misuse.
What it Entails:
How to Implement:
Establish automated revocation triggers. For example, if your EDR detects a compromise on a developer’s machine, your governance layer should automatically revoke all their JIT sessions across every cloud database.
| Component | What It Covers | How to Implement | |
| Purpose and Scope | Defines which data, identities (human + NHI), and regions are governed. | Scope policies at the resource level with automated discovery. | |
| Roles and Responsibilities | Assigns every identity and service account to a clear human owner. | Use self-service access with owner-defined JIT approval flows. | |
| Data Classification & Handling | Classifies data by sensitivity and enforces handling requirements. | Apply labels as code and enforce them through access controls. | |
| Data Access Policy | Controls how access is requested, approved, and expired. | Replace standing roles with ephemeral JIT permissions. | |
| Data Usage Policy | Defines what identities can do with data after access is granted. | Tie access to task-specific, time-bound sessions. | |
| Data Quality Standards | Ensures data accuracy, consistency, and traceability. | Embed data observability and grant temporary investigation access. | |
| Data Lifecycle Rules | Governs data retention, archiving, and secure deletion. | Automate retention and enforce cryptographic erasure. | |
| Logging & Auditing | Captures real-time, immutable access activity for all identities. | Generate audit logs automatically at policy enforcement time. | |
| Incident Response | Defines containment, revocation, and investigation workflows. | Trigger automatic session revocation on compromise signals. |
A data governance policy is only as effective as its enforcement layer. Static roles and manual approval queues create identity sprawl. For a policy to be more than a documented ideal, it must be programmatically enforced across every cloud resource and API.
Apono operationalizes data governance by transforming passive guidelines into enforceable, identity-aware controls applied consistently across cloud infrastructure, data stores, and APIs.
As a cloud-native access management platform, Apono replaces risky, long-lived permissions with Just-In-Time (JIT) access. This ensures that every identity operates under a strict Least Privilege model, receiving ephemeral, per-session credentials that expire automatically.
This shift to dynamic access directly supports key access-control requirements across SOC 2, GDPR, and HIPAA. By capturing the full context behind every access decision, Apono ensures your governance posture is defensible by default. You move away from manual audit archaeology and toward a centralized, immutable audit plane where compliance is a continuous byproduct of your operational workflow.
Data governance only works when access is continuously enforced. Explore how Apono enforces access compliance across cloud environments, turning policy into proof and making audit readiness a built-in part of how teams operate. Or, book a live demo to see JIT access in action.
As organizations increasingly leverage Kubernetes for modern, cloud-native applications, the challenge of managing these environments securely and at scale grows. A centralized platform is needed to simplify Kubernetes operations, enabling deployment, management, and security across cloud, on-prem, and edge locations. Crucially, access to these Kubernetes environments, particularly production clusters, demands stringent control. Unnecessary security risks and operational burdens are introduced by persistent, over-privileged access.
Apono and SUSE have come together to ensure that customers have frictionless and secure access to their Kubernetes resources.
SUSE® Rancher Prime centralizes and simplifies Kubernetes operations, enabling deployment, management, and security across cloud, on-prem, and edge locations. Apono redefines cloud-native access governance by eliminating standing privileges and delivering just-in-time and just-enough privileges. By integrating SUSE Rancher Prime with Apono, organizations can streamline delivery of vital Kubernetes resources with reduced risk and without hindering the productivity of engineering teams.
Organizations managing Kubernetes estates commonly face several access-related challenges:
Standing Privileges Increase Risk
To keep teams productive, organizations often grant engineers permanent or overly-broad access to Kubernetes clusters. Over time, these standing privileges expand the attack surface and increase the impact of compromised identities.
Manual Access Requests Create Friction
Access to Kubernetes environments is frequently handled through ticketing systems or manual approvals. These processes slow down development, delay incident response, and place additional strain on platform and security teams.
Lack of Visibility and Governance
As the number of clusters and projects grows, it becomes harder to track who has access to what. Without continuous visibility and centralized governance, enforcing least-privilege access and preparing for audits becomes increasingly difficult.
Balancing Security and Developer Velocity
Security teams aim to reduce risk, while developers need fast, reliable access to do their jobs. Without the right tooling, organizations are forced to choose between strong security controls and operational efficiency.
Apono‘s integration with SUSE Rancher introduces automated, context-based access governance designed specifically for modern Kubernetes environments.
Just-In-Time Access to Kubernetes Resources
Apono replaces standing access with time-bound permissions to SUSE Rancher clusters and projects. Users receive access only when needed, and permissions are automatically revoked when the access window ends.
Just-Enough Privilege by Design
Access is granted based on adaptable, scalable, and intent-driven policies, ensuring users receive only the permissions required for their specific tasks. This reduces the risk of accidental misconfigurations and limits the blast radius of potential security incidents.
Continuous Discovery and Centralized Visibility
Apono continuously discovers SUSE Rancher-managed Kubernetes resources, giving security and platform teams a real-time view of environments even as infrastructure changes.
Automated, Auditable Access Workflows
Every access request, approval, and permission change is logged automatically, providing clear audit trails for compliance and security reviews without manual effort.
Security Without Slowing Teams Down
Developers, data engineers, DevOps teams, and contractors can request access on demand through engineer-friendly ChatOps tools such as Slack and Microsoft Teams, Apono’s AI-powered user portal, as well as platforms like Backstage and MCP servers — eliminating ticket queues while keeping security teams firmly in control.
Together, Apono and SUSE enable organizations to run Kubernetes securely at scale. SUSE Rancher Prime provides the operational foundation for managing Kubernetes environments, while Apono ensures access to those environments is controlled, auditable, and free of standing privileges.
The result is a Kubernetes access model that supports speed, security, and compliance without compromise.
Contact our team for a demo and see how you can start implementing Zero Standing Privileges (ZSP) and delivering just-in-time and just-enough privileges across the SUSE Rancher ecosystem today.