Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Cyber Security
  • Internet of Things
  • Tips and Advice

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Why AI’s Rise Makes Protecting Personal Data More Critical Than Ever

February 6, 2026

New RCEs, Darknet Busts, Kernel Bugs & 25+ More Stories

February 6, 2026

Survey of 100+ Energy Systems Reveals Critical OT Cybersecurity Gaps

February 6, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Friday, February 6
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Cyberwire Daily
  • Home
  • News
  • Cyber Security
  • Internet of Things
  • Tips and Advice
Cyberwire Daily
Home»News»The Hidden Risk of Orphan Accounts
News

The Hidden Risk of Orphan Accounts

Team-CWDBy Team-CWDJanuary 26, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


The Problem: The Identities Left Behind

As organizations grow and evolve, employees, contractors, services, and systems come and go – but their accounts often remain. These abandoned or “orphan” accounts sit dormant across applications, platforms, assets, and cloud consoles.

The reason they persist isn’t negligence – it’s fragmentation.

Traditional IAM and IGA systems are designed primarily for human users and depend on manual onboarding and integration for each application – connectors, schema mapping, entitlement catalogs, and role modeling. Many applications never make it that far. Meanwhile, non-human identities (NHIs): service accounts, bots, APIs, and agent-AI processes are natively ungoverned, operating outside standard IAM frameworks and often without ownership, visibility, or lifecycle controls.

The result? A shadow layer of untracked identities forming part of the broader identity dark matter – accounts invisible to governance but still active in infrastructure.

Why They’re Not Tracked

  1. Integration Bottlenecks: Every app requires a unique configuration before IAM can manage it. Unmanaged and local systems are rarely prioritized.
  2. Partial Visibility: IAM tools see only the “managed” slice of identity – leaving behind local admin accounts, service identities, and legacy systems.
  3. Complex Ownership: Turnover, mergers, and distributed teams make it unclear who owns which application or account.
  4. AI-Agents and Automation: Agent-AI introduces a new category of semi-autonomous identities that act independently from their human operators, further breaking the IAM model.

Learn more about IAM shortcuts and the impacts that accompany them visit.

The Real-World Risk

Orphan accounts are the unlocked back doors of the enterprise.

They hold valid credentials, often with elevated privileges, but no active owner. Attackers know this and use them.

  • Colonial Pipeline (2021) – attackers entered via an old/inactive VPN account with no MFA. Multiple sources corroborate the “inactive/legacy” account detail.
  • Manufacturing company hit by Akira ransomware (2025) – breach came through a “ghost” third-party vendor account that wasn’t deactivated (i.e., an orphaned/vendor account). SOC write-up from Barracuda Managed XDR.
  • M&A context – during post-acquisition consolidation, it’s common to discover thousands of stale accounts/tokens; Enterprises note orphaned (often NHI) identities as a persistent post-M&A threat, citing very high rates of still-active former employee tokens.

Orphan accounts fuel multiple risks:

  • Compliance exposure: Violates least-privilege and deprovisioning requirements (ISO 27001, NIS2, PCI DSS, FedRAMP).
  • Operational inefficiency: Inflated license counts and unnecessary audit overhead.
  • Incident response drag: Forensics and remediation slow down when unseen accounts are involved.

The Way Forward: Continuous Identity Audit

Enterprises need evidence, not assumptions. Eliminating orphan accounts requires full identity observability – the ability to see and verify every account, permission, and activity, whether managed or not.

Modern mitigation includes:

  • Identity Telemetry Collection: Extract activity signals directly from applications, managed and unmanaged.
  • Unified Audit Trail: Correlate joiner/mover/leaver events, authentication logs, and usage data to confirm ownership and legitimacy.
  • Role Context Mapping: File real usage insights and privilege context into identity profiles – showing who used what, when, and why.
  • Continuous Enforcement: Automatically flag or decommission accounts with no activity or ownership, reducing risk without waiting for manual reviews.

When this telemetry feeds into a central identity audit layer, it closes the visibility gap, turning orphan accounts from hidden liabilities into measurable, managed entities.

To learn more, visit Audit Playbook: Continuous Application Inventory Reporting.

The Orchid Perspective

Orchid’s Identity Audit capability delivers this foundation. By combining application-level telemetry with automated audit collection, it provides verifiable, continuous insight into how identities – human, non-human, and agent-AI – are actually used.

It’s not another IAM system; it’s the connective tissue that ensures IAM decisions are based on evidence, not estimation.

Note: This article was written and contributed by Roy Katmor, CEO of Orchid Security.

Found this article interesting? This article is a contributed piece from one of our valued partners. Follow us on Google News, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.





Source

computer security cyber attacks cyber news cyber security news cyber security news today cyber security updates cyber updates data breach hacker news hacking news how to hack information security network security ransomware malware software vulnerability the hacker news
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleEvelyn Stealer Malware Abuses VS Code Extensions to Steal Developer Credentials and Crypto
Next Article Hackers Use LinkedIn Messages to Spread RAT Malware Through DLL Sideloading
Team-CWD
  • Website

Related Posts

News

New RCEs, Darknet Busts, Kernel Bugs & 25+ More Stories

February 6, 2026
News

Survey of 100+ Energy Systems Reveals Critical OT Cybersecurity Gaps

February 6, 2026
News

SolarWinds Web Help Desk Vulnerability Actively Exploited

February 6, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest News

North Korean Hackers Turn JSON Services into Covert Malware Delivery Channels

November 24, 202522 Views

macOS Stealer Campaign Uses “Cracked” App Lures to Bypass Apple Securi

September 7, 202517 Views

North Korean Hackers Exploit Threat Intel Platforms For Phishing

September 7, 20256 Views

U.S. Treasury Sanctions DPRK IT-Worker Scheme, Exposing $600K Crypto Transfers and $1M+ Profits

September 5, 20256 Views

Ukrainian Ransomware Fugitive Added to Europe’s Most Wanted

September 11, 20255 Views
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Most Popular

North Korean Hackers Turn JSON Services into Covert Malware Delivery Channels

November 24, 202522 Views

macOS Stealer Campaign Uses “Cracked” App Lures to Bypass Apple Securi

September 7, 202517 Views

North Korean Hackers Exploit Threat Intel Platforms For Phishing

September 7, 20256 Views
Our Picks

Find your weak spots before attackers do

November 21, 2025

Why the tech industry needs to stand firm on preserving end-to-end encryption

September 12, 2025

‘What happens online stays online’ and other cyberbullying myths, debunked

September 11, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from cyberwiredaily.com

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
© 2026 All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.