Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

6 Ways Shadow Access Creates Risk in Your Infrastructure

One of the most dangerous threats to your infrastructure lurks unnoticed: shadow access. Shadow access can take many forms: privileged credentials left behind by former employees, shared keys embedded in code, or ad-hoc access granted outside of policy. These hidden risks can leave your organization vulnerable to breaches, compliance drift, and insider threats — all while remaining invisible to traditional security tools.

Solving Secrets Management Challenges for NHIs: GitGuardian Integration with HashiCorp Vault

Struggling with vault sprawl and NHI secrets? GitGuardian’s new HashiCorp Vault integration helps cybersecurity teams centralize secrets management, reduce blind spots, and strengthen security for today’s intricate infrastructures.

Keeping Secrets Out of Logs: Building a Robust Defence Against Log Leaks

Ever found sensitive data in your logs? You're not alone - even tech giants like Google and Facebook have faced this challenge. Watch this actionable webinar on keeping secrets out of logs featuring our special guest speaker, Allan Reyes. �������� ������'���� ����������: No theoretical fluff - just practical solutions that you can start using tomorrow. Perfect for security engineers, developers, and tech leads who want to sleep better at night knowing their logs aren't accidentally exposing sensitive data.

Trusted Computing: The Role of Infrastructure IAM

The role of trust for both employees and customers has come under increased scrutiny in the past decade. The rise of concepts such as zero trust for the workforce and the privacy/personalisation paradox for customers has moved trust from being an exercise in academic rigour, to one which has realigned enterprise security architecture choices.

It's Finally Time to Embrace Trusted Computing

Does your corporate network treat users on VPNs as trusted regardless of who they are? Does your web server connect to its database as a fictitious user with a password in a config file somewhere? Or perhaps the most frightening scenario: did your platform engineer log in as root to configure your CI/CD pipeline toolchain? These three situations are all examples of anonymous users – someone taking action somewhere on your network or in one of your cloud accounts without identifying themselves.

Teleport's Evolution: Today's Name Changes Reflect a Strategic Shift in Infrastructure Security

As the world of infrastructure security grows more complex, maintaining clarity and precision in how we present our solutions is critical. Teleport’s platform's capabilities have expanded significantly over time. To better align with our mission and help customers understand the full potential of our platform, we are introducing new names for our product suite.