SingaporeOracle announced updates to Oracle Access Governance to help IT teams better assign, monitor, and manage user access to applications and other tech resources. This cloud-native service provides detailed visibility into how users interact with tech resources, helping to reduce risk by allowing only authorised users to use, see, or interact with restricted assets such as source code, patents, databases, applications, or infrastructure resources like cloud servers and services.

Providing enough access to legitimate users without exposing sensitive data, applications, or infrastructure to unintended parties is a growing challenge for all organisations. As different users including employees, contractors, customers and suppliers join or change roles, their access must also change. For example, teaching hospitals store personal information about patients that is protected by HIPAA regulations. Medical students do not need access to patient data, but they will require it when they become residents after graduating. Oracle Access Governance can detect the change in status from student to resident and automatically change permissions based on the needs of the new role.

These challenges are increasingly important in highly regulated or sensitive industries that handle personal data like financial services, healthcare, and government agencies. The City and County of San Francisco (CCSF), for example, serves more than 4.5 million residents and must ensure their services are always accessible for internal and external users including the public, employees, suppliers, and state agencies. As a government agency that provides essential services, CCSF must provide access to users without compromising sensitive data. CCSF turned to Oracle Access Governance because it is user-friendly and available 24×7. Easy-to-use functions to review access and design assignment workflows help CCSF achieve its identity and access management goals.

When organisations need to manage a handful of applications and users, identity and access teams may be able to manually review and grant each individual access request. But, as organisations grow to 10,000, 100,000 or more users—each requiring access to different resources—the job becomes unmanageable for humans.

Oracle Access Governance has helped make it easier for organisations to automate identity governance and administration tasks to better manage the access needs for large numbers of users with new features including:

  • Dynamic Access Control: Helps automate the process of managing the identity lifecycle and resource access. It can grant access to thousands of users at once following several common methods—including attribute, role, or policy-based access control—and enables organisations to customise methods to meet their unique needs. It can also automatically grant access through bundles that assign privileges to large groups with granular and customizable control based on corporate policies and identity collections.
  • No-Code Workflow Formation: Helps organisations define the process for access provisioning, reviews, and control without requiring additional IT or development resources. An intuitive, graphical interface makes it easy for organisations to visualise and design access governance processes while integrating tools such as user management and identity collection services into workflows. A well-designed process speeds up access provisioning for both humans and machines.
  • Swift Application Onboarding: Helps organisations provision access to new on-premises and cloud applications with a guided step-by-step process and simplified data loading. A wizard-based system manages user identities centrally and prepares applications for access provisioning by managing and updating information without cumbersome data migrations. Streamlining the connection between application resources and Oracle Access Governance helps organisations better secure personal information about users.

“As global environments become increasingly digital and complex, it is becoming more challenging for organisations to efficiently manage user access and protect sensitive information,” said Pavana Jain, vice president of product management, Oracle Identity and Access Management. “The new features within Oracle Access Governance address a critical gap in the market by giving organisations better tools to maintain a complete view of user access and manage those permissions even in shifting IT environments.”

“With our transition to a cloud-based governance solution, Oracle Access Governance presents an appealing option for streamlining user access reviews, providing enterprise-wide visibility into access permissions, ensuring zero migration effort, and offering insight-driven analytics,” said Monica J. Field, IT director, identity and access management, Cummins Inc. “We believe it has the potential to enhance our IT security and efficiency, making it a worthwhile solution for organisations exploring cloud governance platforms.”

“As we steer our path towards the adoption of a cloud native governance architecture, Oracle Access Governance rises as a critical player in this arena. Its strategic design, emphasising intuitive user access review, prescriptive analytics powered by data insights, and automated remediation, echoes our commitment to fostering a secure IT environment,” said Chinna Subramaniam, director, IAM & directory Services, Department of Technology, City and County of San Francisco. “This cloud native service aligns perfectly with our forward-looking IT security strategy, and we are eager to explore its potential.”

“Oracle Access Governance offers the capabilities we need to meet our strategic business and security requirements including intuitive access reviews through a user-friendly and productive user interface, robust analytics, and automated remediation powered by advanced machine learning technologies,” said John Kelly, director, identity and access services, University Information Technology Services, UMass. “This cloud-native service supports our commitment to building a secure and cost-effective IT environment for our employees, students, and businesses. Because it can seamlessly connect to our existing identity governance and administration solution and other investments on-premises and in the cloud, Oracle Access Governance is a pivotal asset for our identity governance strategy.”

APDR_Bulletin_728X90


For Editorial Inquiries Contact:
Editor Kym Bergmann at kym.bergmann@venturamedia.net

For Advertising Inquiries Contact:
Director of Sales Graham Joss at graham.joss@venturamedia.net

Previous articleGCAP advanced electronics partners zero in on joint project delivery set-up
Next articleAustrian MOD selects C-390 Millennium as new military transport aircraft

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here