Skip to content

Segura® Welcomes CFO Igor Iuki Murakami to Drive IPO Readiness and International Growth

Segura, a company specializing in continuous application security, has announced the appointment of Igor Iuki Murakami as its new Chief Financial Officer. With a career spanning over 20 years in finance and a strong background in the technology and security sectors, Murakami brings a wealth of experience to the company’s executive team.

A Strategic Addition to Leadership

According to the press release, Murakami’s appointment is a strategic move to support Segura’s rapid growth and market expansion. His experience with financial planning, fundraising, and mergers and acquisitions will be crucial as the company scales its operations and continues to develop its innovative application security solutions. Segura’s CEO emphasized that Murakami’s deep understanding of the industry and his proven track record of helping technology companies grow make him an ideal fit for the role.

Commitment to Growth and Security

The addition of a new CFO signals Segura’s commitment to strengthening its financial and operational leadership. The company aims to accelerate its mission of providing robust application security platforms that help businesses protect their digital assets from an increasingly complex threat landscape. Murakami’s leadership is expected to play a key role in guiding Segura through its next phase of growth while maintaining its focus on innovation and security excellence.

About Segura®
Segura® strive to ensure the sovereignty of companies over actions and privileged information. To this end, we work against data theft through traceability of administrator actions on networks, servers, databases and a multitude of devices. In addition, we pursue compliance with auditing requirements and the most demanding standards, including PCI DSS, Sarbanes-Oxley, ISO 27001 and HIPAA.

About Version 2 Digital

Version 2 Digital is one of the most dynamic IT companies in Asia. The company distributes a wide range of IT products across various areas including cyber security, cloud, data protection, end points, infrastructures, system monitoring, storage, networking, business productivity and communication products.

Through an extensive network of channels, point of sales, resellers, and partnership companies, Version 2 offers quality products and services which are highly acclaimed in the market. Its customers cover a wide spectrum which include Global 1000 enterprises, regional listed companies, different vertical industries, public utilities, Government, a vast number of successful SMEs, and consumers in various Asian cities.

A CISO’s Guide to Managing Machine Identities

Practical strategies for securing your digital infrastructure beyond human users.

In today’s complex digital environment, machines are often the majority of users accessing systems and data. This presents a new challenge for Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) and their teams: how to manage and secure these non-human “machine identities.” A failure in this area can lead to costly outages, data breaches, and a lack of control over your infrastructure.

Types of Critical Machine Identities

API Keys and Secrets

These provide programmatic access to services, often bypassing standard security controls. They are a common source of vulnerability if not properly managed, as they can lead to unauthorized access and API security gaps.

Service Accounts

These accounts enable automated operations across systems. They are a significant part of an organization’s identity landscape, and securing them is essential to prevent misuse and credential sprawl.

TLS/SSL Certificates

Certificates secure communication across thousands of endpoints. When they expire or are mismanaged, they can cause major vulnerabilities and disrupt access to critical services. Proper lifecycle management is key to preventing these issues.

Core Strategies for Management

Automated Discovery and Monitoring

You can’t secure what you can’t see. CISOs should deploy automated scanners to discover all machine identities, including forgotten or “shadow” credentials. Continuously monitoring these identities ensures that vulnerabilities are found early.

Lifecycle Management and Ownership

Every machine identity should have a human owner responsible for its lifecycle—from creation to retirement. Automating tasks like dynamic secret generation and automated credential expiration can help scale this process and reduce manual errors.

Integrating Machine Identities into IAM

Machine identities must be a core part of your overall Identity and Access Management (IAM) strategy. By doing so, you gain a unified view and consistent control over both human and non-human access to your most critical systems.

About Segura®
Segura® strive to ensure the sovereignty of companies over actions and privileged information. To this end, we work against data theft through traceability of administrator actions on networks, servers, databases and a multitude of devices. In addition, we pursue compliance with auditing requirements and the most demanding standards, including PCI DSS, Sarbanes-Oxley, ISO 27001 and HIPAA.

About Version 2 Digital

Version 2 Digital is one of the most dynamic IT companies in Asia. The company distributes a wide range of IT products across various areas including cyber security, cloud, data protection, end points, infrastructures, system monitoring, storage, networking, business productivity and communication products.

Through an extensive network of channels, point of sales, resellers, and partnership companies, Version 2 offers quality products and services which are highly acclaimed in the market. Its customers cover a wide spectrum which include Global 1000 enterprises, regional listed companies, different vertical industries, public utilities, Government, a vast number of successful SMEs, and consumers in various Asian cities.

身分安全:為何在擁擠的市場中,專注仍能取勝

專注的力量:為何專業的身分安全方案勝過大型整合平台

現代資訊安全主管的兩難困境

如果您是一位資訊安全主管,您正遊走於一個充滿矛盾的處境。您被要求整合供應商,卻只能費力拼湊破碎的平台。您面臨導入 AI 的壓力,但現有工具卻難以管理既有的機器身分。您被要求證明合規性,但傳統的特權存取管理(Privileged Access Management, PAM)解決方案卻無法擴展以滿足稽核要求。

這項挑戰是普遍存在的。在您最需要更智慧、更簡單的身分控管時,市場上卻充斥著功能臃腫、承諾一切卻成效甚微的平台。隨著大型科技公司不斷整合網絡安全工具,創新停滯、應變時間變慢的風險正逐漸成為現實 —— 尤其是在面對如 AI 驅動的身分攻擊等新型威脅時。

在 Segura®,我們選擇了一條不同的道路。我們專注於身分安全 (Identity Security)領域,力求做到極致,從而能以更快、更有效率的方式交付價值,並提供單體式平台無法比擬的卓越使用者體驗。

超越傳統 PAM:一種現代化的方法

由於傳統 PAM 工具的複雜性、高昂成本和緩慢的部署速度,許多資訊安全團隊已開始將其汰換。供應商的整合趨勢只會加劇這些問題。在做出改變之前,具洞察力的領導者們正在提出正確的問題:

  • 部署需要數天,還是會拖上好幾個月?
  • 能否在單一介面中同時管理人類與機器的身分?
  • 定價是否透明,還是會面臨隱藏費用?
  • 我們的團隊會真心採用,還是會設法繞道而行?

Segura® 的架構旨在為這些問題提供明確、肯定的答案,提供速度、控制力與透明度。

「Segura 的支援服務不僅卓越 —— 反應迅速且知識淵博,這和我們過去與其他供應商的經驗截然不同。」 – 服務業,資訊安全分析師

統一平台,單一使命

身分是新的安全邊界,但大多數平台仍將其視為眾多功能之一。Segura® 與眾不同。我們的每一項功能 —— 從特權存取管理(PAM)、雲端基礎架構權限管理(CIEM),到端點權限管理 (EPM)和 DevOps 機密管理(DSM)—— 都是為了一個目標而打造:讓您的團隊在任何複雜環境中都能精準控制每一個身分。

我們的原生整合與模組化設計,讓您能透過單一介面全面控制人類與機器的身分,從而實現更快的決策並消除安全盲點。

企業級安全,告別企業級的沉重負擔

當特權存取工具需要數月才能完成部署時,您將錯過稽核的最後期限,權宜之計開始堆積,團隊的疲乏感也隨之加劇。Segura® 只需數小時即可完成部署,而非數月,讓您能立即掌握控制權並實現價值。這意味著:

  • 加速實現價值:從第一天起就保護您的環境。
  • 最低的管理負擔:減少對昂貴第三方顧問的依賴。
  • 最大化團隊賦能:用您的團隊真正會使用的直觀工具來賦予他們力量

全球規模,在地專業

在身分安全領域,應變時間與在地化情境至關重要。我們的區域卓越中心(Centers of Excellence)提供全年無休的多語言支援,由了解您所在地區法規和營運細微差異的在地專家為您服務。這確保您能迅速解決問題,並持續遵循 GDPR、HIPAA 和 SAMA 等法規框架。

在整合時代下的策略獨立性

當市場逐漸被少數幾家科技巨擘整合時,Segura® 始終保持策略上的獨立性。我們的基礎設施和治理架構旨在確保數碼主權,讓您的資訊安全態勢免於供應商鎖定、被迫的平台變更及地緣政治不穩定性所帶來的風險。

結論:化繁為簡,追求清晰

近期的網絡安全收購浪潮,在資訊安全團隊最需要清晰明確的時刻,反而製造了更多複雜性。Segura® 提供了一個專注的替代方案,它能適應您的環境、隨您的需求擴展,並讓您的團隊重新掌握主導權。立即加入成千上萬資訊安全專業人士的行列,轉換到一個部署更快、管理更容易,並深受全球團隊信賴的解決方案。

關於 Segura®

Segura® 致力於確保企業對其特權操作與資訊的自主掌控。為此,我們透過追蹤管理者在網絡、伺服器、資料庫及眾多裝置上的操作,有效防範資料竊取。此外,我們也協助企業符合稽核要求及最嚴格的標準,包括 PCI DSS、沙賓法案(Sarbanes-Oxley)、ISO 27001 及 HIPAA。

關於Version 2

Version 2 Digital 是立足亞洲的增值代理商及IT開發者。公司在網絡安全、雲端、數據保護、終端設備、基礎設施、系統監控、存儲、網絡管理、商業生產力和通信產品等各個領域代理發展各種 IT 產品。透過公司龐大的網絡、通路、銷售點、分銷商及合作夥伴,Version 2 提供廣被市場讚賞的產品及服務。Version 2 的銷售網絡包括台灣、香港、澳門、中國大陸、新加坡、馬來西亞等各亞太地區,客戶來自各行各業,包括全球 1000 大跨國企業、上市公司、公用事業、醫療、金融、教育機構、政府部門、無數成功的中小企及來自亞洲各城市的消費市場客戶。

Identity Security Intelligence Part 4: Detecting and Responding to Identity Compromise at Speed

What to Expect in this Blog:

In Part 4 of the Identity Security Intelligence series, we shift from building defenses to active response. You’ll learn how to detect identity compromise early—before attackers escalate privileges or blend in as trusted users. We’ll cover real-world indicators of identity abuse, how to triage and contain threats with minimal business impact, and why identity-centric response playbooks are essential for modern security teams. Because when credentials are the new attack vector, speed and precision in response are your best defense.

In previous parts of this series, we laid the groundwork for modern identity defense:

  • Part 1 uncovered identities and privileges across complex environments.
  • Part 2 enforced least privilege through intelligent controls.
  • Part 3 showed how to audit and govern access for accountability and compliance.

Now, we shift focus from preparation to action.

Because no matter how well you discover, control, or govern, —identities will most likely be compromised.

And when they are, the speed and precision of your identity incident response will determine whether you contain the breach… or become the next headline.

The New Breach Attack Path: From Credential Theft to Full Compromise

Identity is now the adversary’s primary and top attack surface.

Attackers don’t need to drop malware if they can log in using stolen credentials.

The kill chain is no longer linear—it’s lateral and identity-based:

  1. Initial Access – Phishing, token theft, credential stuffing, or session hijacking
  2. Privilege Escalation – Abuse of misconfigured roles or overlooked entitlements
  3. Lateral Movement – Reuse of credentials, token impersonation, and cloud hopping
  4. Data Access & Exfiltration – With legitimate access and minimal detection
  5. Persistence – Creation of shadow admins or token misuse for future re-entry

By the time the SOC sees unusual behavior, the attacker may have already weaponized privileges, disabled MFA, or tampered with audit logs.

This demands a shift from reactive forensics to identity-first detection and response.

What Does Identity Compromise Look Like?

Identity compromise isn’t always obvious. It often appears as “normal” behavior executed by a legitimate identity, —but in the wrong context.

Here’s what defenders must watch for:

🔍 Behavioral Anomalies

  • Logins from  suspicious locations or cases of impossible travel
  • First-time access to sensitive systems or apps
  • Sudden privilege usage not seen historically

🛠️ Misuse of Privilege

  • Lateral movement via service accounts or shared credentials
  • Privilege escalation followed by sensitive actions (e.g., mailbox exports)
  • Admin role usage outside business hours

🔄 Token and Session Abuse

  • Reuse of session tokens from new devices or geos
  • Long-lived refresh tokens used across systems
  • OAuth token abuse in cloud environments

🧪 Signs of Persistence

  • New access grants to dormant accounts
  • Creation of new roles, keys, or service principals
  • Disabling of MFA or conditional access policies

You can’t detect this from login data alone. You need correlated identity intelligence (—privileges, entitlements, historical behavior, and audit context) —all tied together in near real time.

Identity-Centric Incident Response: The New Playbook

When an identity is compromised, speed matters. But speed without precision causes collateral damage.

Here’s how modern security teams respond using identity intelligence:

🧠 Step 1: Triage the Identity, Not Just the Alert

Instead of treating every alert as isolated, pivot to the identity in question:

  • Who owns it?
  • What can it do?
  • Where does it have access?
  • Has its behavior changed recently?

Use entitlement graphs and historical behavior to understand the potential blast radius.

🛑 Step 2: Contain Without Breaking the Business

Shutting down access is easy. Doing it surgically is the challenge.

Containment options include:

  • Temporarily disabling high-risk privileges (not the entire account)
  • Revoking OAuth or SAML tokens across federated systems
  • Suspending specific roles or group memberships
  • Forcing reauthentication with step-up MFA

This minimizes disruption while blocking the attacker’s movement.

🔁 Step 3: Trace the Incident Through Identity Audit Logs

Use your identity audit layer (from Part 3) to:

  • Identify what the attacker did post-compromise
  • Map lateral movement across systems
  • Determine whether data was accessed or exfiltrated
  • Reconstruct actions taken with elevated privileges

This moves you from assumptions to fact-based forensics.

🧼 Step 4: Remediate the Access Footprint

Once contained, clean up:

  • Remove suspicious roles, keys, and tokens
  • Reset secrets and credentials
  • Review group memberships and admin delegation
  • Verify no new identities or backdoors were created

Use historical privilege analysis to restore only what’s necessary, not everything the identity had before.

🔒 Step 5: Strengthen Controls and Update Detection Logic

Every incident is a learning opportunity. Post-incident, ask:

  • Were there missed signals in identity behavior?
  • Was privilege creep a factor?
  • Should access reviews be more frequent?
  • Can risky entitlements be removed permanently?

Update detection rules, access policies, and governance workflows to close the loop.

Identity Intelligence in Detection & Response Tools

The most effective incident response programs integrate identity signals directly into their tools:

  • SIEMs enriched with identity metadata (roles, entitlements, behavior baselines)
  • SOAR playbooks that automate token revocation, MFA enforcement, and role removal
  • UEBA tools that analyze deviations from normal identity usage
  • IAM/PAM platforms that trigger step-up auth or session recordings during high-risk activity

Response becomes not just fast, —but intelligent, contextual, and minimally invasive.

Don’t Wait for the Breach: Simulate It and Be Incident Response Ready

One of the most underused capabilities in identity security is attack path simulation:

  • Use tools to model how an attacker might move from a compromised identity to high-value assets.
  • Identify exposed privilege chains or risky access paths.
  • Test incident response plans using these simulated scenarios.

This lets teams respond in practice, not panic.

The Bottom Line

Identity compromise is inevitable. But uncontrolled blast radius is not.

Modern attackers exploit identity gaps faster than legacy detection tools can react. To defend effectively, you need more than logs and alerts—you need identity intelligence in every phase of your response.

By combining discovery, control, audit, and intelligent detection, security teams can:

  • Recognize identity compromise early.
  • Contain it precisely.
  • Investigate it accurately.
  • Remediate it thoroughly.
  • Evolve their defenses continuously.

Because in the new perimeter, the most dangerous breach isn’t the one with malware—it’s the one that looks like a trusted user… until it’s too late.

About Segura®
Segura® strive to ensure the sovereignty of companies over actions and privileged information. To this end, we work against data theft through traceability of administrator actions on networks, servers, databases and a multitude of devices. In addition, we pursue compliance with auditing requirements and the most demanding standards, including PCI DSS, Sarbanes-Oxley, ISO 27001 and HIPAA.

About Version 2 Digital

Version 2 Digital is one of the most dynamic IT companies in Asia. The company distributes a wide range of IT products across various areas including cyber security, cloud, data protection, end points, infrastructures, system monitoring, storage, networking, business productivity and communication products.

Through an extensive network of channels, point of sales, resellers, and partnership companies, Version 2 offers quality products and services which are highly acclaimed in the market. Its customers cover a wide spectrum which include Global 1000 enterprises, regional listed companies, different vertical industries, public utilities, Government, a vast number of successful SMEs, and consumers in various Asian cities.

Machine Identity Crisis: A Security Risk Hiding in Plain Sight

Key Takeaways for CISOs and IT Teams:

  • Machine identities now outnumber humans 45 to 1—but most go unmanaged.

  • SSL/TLS certificate lifespans will shrink to 47 days by 2029, making manual management unsustainable.

  • 71% of breaches now start with stolen or misused credentials—including certificates and service accounts.

  • Most teams fail audits due to poor machine identity visibility, ownership, and lifecycle control.

  • This guide shows how to prevent outages, avoid audit risk, and automate before it’s too late.

When Microsoft Teams went dark for millions of users worldwide, the culprit wasn’t a sophisticated cyberattack or server failure. It was an expired SSL certificate. A simple piece of digital paperwork that nobody remembered to renew brought down one of the world’s most critical communication platforms. 

This isn’t an isolated incident. It’s a glimpse into a massive security blind spot that’s hiding in plain sight across every enterprise network: machine identity management.

Why machine identities are the new security frontier 

While your security team has spent years perfecting human identity management (multi-factor authentication, single sign-on, privileged access controls), an invisible workforce has been quietly multiplying in the background. 

These are your machine identities: the digital certificates, API keys, and cryptographic tokens that authenticate servers, applications, and IoT devices. 

Today, these non-human identities outnumber human employees by ratios as high as 45 to 1, and security leaders expect that number to grow by another 150% in the coming year. 

When machine identities are compromised or mismanaged, the consequences range from data breaches that make headlines to outages that cost millions in lost revenue. Yet most organizations are still managing these critical credentials with the same manual processes they used a decade ago. That is, if they’re managing them at all.

What Is a Machine Identity?

Think of machine identity as the digital equivalent of a passport or driver’s license, but for software, devices, and automated systems. Just as humans prove their identity with credentials, machines authenticate themselves using digital certificates, cryptographic keys, API tokens, and other secrets.

A “machine” in this context isn’t limited to physical hardware. It encompasses any non-human entity in your digital ecosystem: servers, virtual machines, containers, microservices, APIs, databases, applications, IoT sensors, and even AI models. 

Each requires some form of identifier and credential to establish trust with other systems. Common forms of machine identity include:

  • X.509 certificates for establishing encrypted HTTPS connections
  • API keys that authenticate applications to cloud services
  • SSH keys for secure server access and file transfers
  • Service account credentials that enable applications to access databases
  • OAuth tokens for secure API communications
  • Session-based credentials for Agentic AI acting on behalf of users across SaaS platforms or browser environments
  • Access tokens used in autonomous workflows and machine-to-machine actions

When you visit a website and see the HTTPS padlock, you’re witnessing machine identity in action. The server presents a digital certificate proving its legitimacy before your browser trusts it with sensitive data. This same principle scales across your entire infrastructure. Every service-to-service connection should verify identity before exchanging information.

The challenge lies in the explosive growth of these digital credentials. The growing trend of decentralization is disrupting cybersecurity oversight, with 75% of employees expected to acquire or modify tech outside IT’s control by 2027

Each new application, microservice, or automated process adds more machine identities to manage, creating complexity that manual processes simply cannot handle.

The Hidden Risks of Unmanaged Machine Identities

Overlooking machine identities creates serious business risks that extend far beyond IT operations. When these credentials are compromised or mismanaged, the consequences ripple through your entire organization.

Breach Enablement Through Credential Compromise

Attackers are increasingly using machine credentials as entry points, and breaches that start with stolen or compromised credentials have seen a 71% year-over-year rise. 

When attackers compromise a machine identity, they effectively “become” a trusted system within your network. This grants them the ability to move laterally, access sensitive data, and establish persistent footholds without triggering traditional security alerts. 

Unlike human accounts that often show suspicious behavior, compromised machine credentials can act normally while exfiltrating data or preparing attacks unnoticed.

The SolarWinds supply chain attack is perhaps the most stark example of this threat. Hackers misused digital certificates to impersonate trusted software updates, making malware appear legitimate and bypassing security controls. As a result, they got access to over 18,000 organizations around the world. 

The Washington Post described the attack as “the computer network equivalent of sneaking into the State Department and printing perfectly forged U.S. passports.”

Operational Disruptions and Revenue Loss

Certificate-related outages represent one of the most common yet preventable causes of business disruption. In addition to creating headaches for IT, they lead to lost revenue, customer frustration, and reputational damage.

Studies indicate that a single expired certificate outage can cost large organizations millions in recovery efforts and business impact.

The root cause often stems from a lack of visibility: teams simply don’t know where certificates are deployed or when they’re set to expire.

Now, the challenge is about to get harder. Starting in March 2026, the maximum validity period for public SSL/TLS certificates will drop from 398 days to 200 days, and by 2029, that window will shrink to just 47 days. This change—driven by industry mandates—will require certificates to be renewed up to 8 times a year. Manual management won’t scale. Without automation, organizations risk facing a flood of avoidable outages, compliance failures, and exposure from stale or expired credentials.

As your infrastructure grows more dynamic—with containers, microservices, and agentic AI adding complexity—automated certificate lifecycle management is no longer optional. It’s foundational.

Compliance and Governance Gaps

When organizations can’t inventory or secure their machine credentials, they risk failing audits and violating data protection requirements.

It’s particularly challenging because 88% of companies still treat “privileged user” as meaning humans only, even though about 42% of machine identities have sensitive or admin-level access. This creates a dangerous gap where powerful machine credentials operate without the oversight typically applied to privileged human accounts.

Cyber insurers and regulators are beginning to scrutinize machine identity practices more closely. Organizations that can’t demonstrate proper credential management may face higher insurance premiums, regulatory penalties, or exclusion from certain contracts requiring security certifications.

How Machine Identities Enable Modern Security Initiatives

Securing machine identities is a powerful enabler of transformative security and business initiatives. When properly managed, machine identities become the backbone of Zero Trust architectures, cloud-native development, and DevOps automation.

Zero Trust Security: “Never Trust, Always Verify” for Machines

Zero Trust security models require verification for every access request, whether from humans or machines. The principle “validate every machine’s identity irrespective of its location” ensures that malicious devices or rogue microservices can’t exploit implicit trust relationships.

Machine identity management makes Zero Trust architectures possible by ensuring every API call and service-to-service connection presents valid credentials. No machine or workload receives implicit trust based on network location. Each must prove its identity at every interaction, similar to multi-factor authentication for users.

Implementing mutual TLS, where each service possesses its own certificate, is a good example of this approach. Services only communicate after both parties prove their identities, preventing attackers from exploiting unverified connections. Even if one service is compromised, attackers can’t impersonate other trusted machines across the network.

Cloud-Native Scaling and Microservices

Modern cloud architectures depend heavily on microservices, containers, and APIs, which are essentially fleets of machines that scale dynamically based on demand. Managing identities manually in this environment becomes impossible so you need automated machine identity solutions to secure growth at scale.

Companies like Netflix show the power of this approach. Netflix uses an internal machine identity framework based on SPIFFE/SPIRE (a set of open-source standards for service identity) to authenticate thousands of microservices in real time, ensuring secure service-to-service communication across its global infrastructure. This implementation resulted in a 60% reduction in security incidents within their microservices environment.

Similar to Netflix, companies with proper machine identity management can auto-scale services without sacrificing security. Every new instance automatically receives valid credentials, and every connection maintains encryption and verification. 

This eliminates the traditional trade-off between agility and security, enabling developers to deploy rapid updates and connect to third-party APIs while maintaining least privilege access controls.

DevOps and Automation: Agility with Security

DevOps environments require automation to maintain both speed and safety. Machine identity management integrated into CI/CD pipelines automates the critical tasks of issuing, configuring, and rotating credentials for applications and infrastructure.

This automation prevents human errors that cause outages while accelerating deployment cycles. When a new microservice comes online during deployment, automated machine identity services immediately issue certificates and update trust stores, enabling secure communication from the start. No helpdesk tickets, no delays, no forgotten expiring certificates.

Strong machine identities also enable advanced practices like microsegmentation and fine-grained access control in orchestration platforms. Each service maintains its own credentials and operates within defined interaction boundaries, supporting both rapid development and robust security controls.

Best Practices for Securing Machine Identities

Implementing effective machine identity security requires a systematic approach that addresses discovery, automation, access control, and monitoring. These practices provide the foundation for managing machine identities at enterprise scale.

Maintain Comprehensive Inventory and Discovery

You cannot protect what you don’t know exists. Start by creating and maintaining an up-to-date inventory of all machine identities across your environment, whether it’s certificates, keys, API tokens, service accounts, and other credentials. Understand where each credential resides, which systems depend on it, and when it expires or requires renewal.

Many organizations discover hundreds or thousands of forgotten certificates and secrets scattered across cloud and on-premises systems during their first comprehensive audit. Continuous discovery tools can automatically scan networks and integrate with cloud platforms to enumerate these credentials, providing ongoing visibility as new identities are created.

Your inventory should classify privileged versus non-privileged machine accounts, helping you prioritize which credentials require enhanced security controls and monitoring.

Automate Credential Lifecycle Management

Given the volume and short lifespan of modern machine identities, manual management simply doesn’t scale. Automation becomes critical for handling issuance, renewal, and revocation of certificates and keys programmatically.

When new containers or virtual machines launch, automation tools should immediately provision appropriate credentials without human intervention. Implement regular rotation schedules for secrets and keys. Or even better, rotate after each use for highly sensitive credentials.

Automated workflows prevent outages by renewing certificates before expiration and ensure proper retirement of old credentials. These processes should integrate directly into your DevOps pipelines, creating a self-driving identity lifecycle where credentials are issued when needed, rotated frequently, and revoked instantly when suspicious activity occurs.

Enforce Least Privilege Access Controls

Apply the principle of least privilege to all machine identities with the same rigor used for human accounts. Audit the privileges of service accounts, API keys, and certificates to ensure they grant only the access each service actually needs.

If a microservice only needs to read from one database, its credentials shouldn’t allow write access to multiple systems. Too often, machine identities receive over-provisioned permissions or retain default high privileges that create attractive targets for attackers.

Bring machine identities into your Privileged Access Management (PAM) strategy. Vault their credentials, monitor their usage, and require additional verification for sensitive actions. Implement network segmentation based on machine roles, using firewall rules, service mesh policies, or cloud IAM to constrain what each identity can access.

Implement Continuous Monitoring and Response

Establish monitoring across multiple levels to detect misuse or anomalies in machine identity usage. Track certificate and key usage patterns and investigate when dormant certificates suddenly become active or API keys make calls from unusual locations.

Leverage analytics to baseline normal machine-to-machine communication patterns and generate alerts for deviations. Examples include surges in failed certificate authentications or service accounts accessing unusual resources.

Implement centralized logging for all authentication events, including mutual TLS handshakes and key usage, feeding this data into your SIEM platform. When suspicious activity occurs, have incident response playbooks ready to automatically revoke credentials or quarantine services until verification completes.

Regular testing of incident response procedures for machine identity compromise ensures your team can quickly remove or replace stolen credentials across systems, building cyber resilience through preparation and practice.

The Future: AI and Machine Identity Convergence

The relationship between AI and machine identity will evolve in two critical directions: protecting AI systems through robust machine identity controls and leveraging AI to enhance machine identity management capabilities.

Securing AI Through Machine Identity

81% of organizations now consider machine identity protection vital for safeguarding emerging AI and cloud initiatives. As AI-driven platforms become more common, they generate new types of machine identities that require protection. Sophisticated adversaries already target AI models and data, viewing machine credentials as keys to these valuable assets.

Malicious actors who can impersonate AI services or manipulate ML model API credentials could inject bad data, steal sensitive insights, or deploy rogue AI agents with elevated privileges. Protecting AI requires ensuring every automated agent, ML pipeline, and bot maintains a verifiable identity within defined access boundaries.

Future AI development frameworks will likely incorporate machine identity controls as standard practice. Things like digital signatures on AI model files, hardware-backed keys for computing environment verification, and Zero Trust principles applied to every algorithm and data feed.

AI-Enhanced Identity Management

The volume and velocity of machine identity data create perfect opportunities for AI and machine learning analytics. Next-generation identity platforms are beginning to incorporate “self-healing identity systems” that automatically adjust and repair themselves based on learned patterns.

AI engines monitoring certificates and keys could predict optimal renewal timing, automatically suspend credentials showing anomalous usage patterns, and generate replacement credentials to prevent service interruptions. These systems will optimize lifecycle management, finding ideal rotation frequencies based on risk profiles and performing predictive threat detection.

Behavioral analytics powered by AI will help differentiate normal machine behavior from malicious activity, similar to how User and Entity Behavior Analytics (UEBA) detects account takeovers. 

This combination of robust machine identity practices with AI-assisted tools promises predictive, self-healing identity infrastructures that adapt at machine speed to protect against emerging threats.

Taking the First Step: Your Machine Identity Journey

The complexity of machine identity management shouldn’t prevent you from starting. Begin with an honest assessment of your current practices: How are certificates, keys, and service accounts currently handled? What visibility exists into machine credential lifecycles?

Conduct a thorough audit to uncover unknown certificates, hard-coded credentials in scripts, and legacy keys requiring rotation. This audit will make risks tangible to stakeholders while providing the foundation for improvement planning.

Create a roadmap that prioritizes quick wins like renewing near-expiry certificates, cleaning up orphaned credentials – all the while evaluating solutions for long-term automation and management. Engage cross-functional teams across security, IT, and DevOps, since success requires collaboration across these domains.

Frame this initiative as a strategic business move rather than a technical project. Emphasize positive outcomes: preventing costly breaches and downtime, enabling faster cloud deployments, and ensuring customer trust through robust security. 

With leadership support, implement your machine identity management program iteratively. Start with automating certificate management in one infrastructure area, then expand coverage systematically. 

Secure Your Machine Identities Today

Most teams don’t realize the risk until it’s too late. Machine identity security starts now with the right tools and a trusted partner. Segura® simplifies this transition, providing robust, ready-to-implement solutions like automated credential discovery, lifecycle management, and real-time monitoring that integrate seamlessly with your existing DevOps and cloud infrastructure.

Request a personalized demo of Segura® today.

Frequently Asked Questions About Machine Identity Management

What is a machine identity in cybersecurity?

A machine identity is any non-human credential—like a digital certificate, API key, or service account—that systems use to authenticate and communicate securely. These identities are critical for verifying trust between applications, servers, containers, and AI agents.

Why are machine identities a security risk?

Machine identities now outnumber human users by as much as 45 to 1. When they’re unmanaged or overprivileged, attackers can exploit them to move laterally, access sensitive data, and evade detection. Most breaches involving credentials start with a compromised machine identity.

What causes machine identity outages?

Most outages are caused by expired or misconfigured digital certificates. As certificate lifespans shrink to 90 days or less, manual tracking becomes nearly impossible. Without automation, teams risk system failures, compliance gaps, and reputational damage.

How do I prepare for audits involving machine credentials?

Auditors increasingly expect clear visibility, ownership, and lifecycle control of all credentials, including machine identities. You’ll need a current inventory, automated renewal policies, access controls, and logging. Solutions like Segura help teams surface risks and streamline reporting.

What’s the best way to manage machine identities at scale?

Use automated discovery and lifecycle management across certificates, keys, tokens, and service accounts. Integrate credential workflows into CI/CD pipelines. Enforce least privilege access. And continuously monitor for anomalies—especially across cloud, hybrid, and AI-enabled environments.

About Segura®
Segura® strive to ensure the sovereignty of companies over actions and privileged information. To this end, we work against data theft through traceability of administrator actions on networks, servers, databases and a multitude of devices. In addition, we pursue compliance with auditing requirements and the most demanding standards, including PCI DSS, Sarbanes-Oxley, ISO 27001 and HIPAA.

About Version 2 Digital

Version 2 Digital is one of the most dynamic IT companies in Asia. The company distributes a wide range of IT products across various areas including cyber security, cloud, data protection, end points, infrastructures, system monitoring, storage, networking, business productivity and communication products.

Through an extensive network of channels, point of sales, resellers, and partnership companies, Version 2 offers quality products and services which are highly acclaimed in the market. Its customers cover a wide spectrum which include Global 1000 enterprises, regional listed companies, different vertical industries, public utilities, Government, a vast number of successful SMEs, and consumers in various Asian cities.

×

Hello!

Click one of our contacts below to chat on WhatsApp

×