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Identity and access management limits unauthorized access by controlling accounts and permissions; least privilege and MFA reduce breach impact.

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Identity and Access Management (IAM) is the set of processes and systems that create and manage digital identities, verify who or what is requesting access, and decide which resources it may use. It covers people, services, applications, and devices across their lifecycle, including account creation, role changes, and removal. Authentication establishes identity; authorization applies permissions.

IAM is a primary control against unauthorized access: stolen credentials, compromised service accounts, or excessive and abandoned permissions can expose systems and data or enable an attacker to move between them. Effective practice combines phishing-resistant multifactor authentication for sensitive access, least privilege through roles or attributes, prompt joiner–mover–leaver changes, and periodic access reviews. Centralized logs and alerts for unusual authentication or privilege changes support investigation, while carefully governed federation and machine identities prevent one compromised trust relationship from granting broad access.

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Until just a couple of years ago, only a handful of IAM pros knew what service accounts are. In the last years, these silent Non-Human-Identities (NHI) accounts have become one of the most targeted and compromised attack surfaces. Assessments report that compromised service accounts play a key role in lateral movement in over 70% of ransomware attacks. However, there’s an alarming disproportion