2025-06-21 –, Track 3 (Moody Rm. 102)
The future of machine identity and access management is the future of security and business resiliency.
Attend this session to:
- Better communicate about why we must do things differently and soon
- Learn how the open-source software community has looked at addressing the identity problem
- Understand what commercial options are available
- Map a path away from the world of long-lived credentials
Security boils down to trust. Trusting that the code will do what is expected and is free from vulnerabilities. Trusting that the entities interacting with our data and resources have the right to access those resources. Our current approach to both human and non-human access uses the same basic flawed pattern: long-lived credentials.
This approach to trusted access does not take into account who or what is requesting that resource. These secrets, which quite often leak, are an attacker's best friend and are how attackers think about getting into and moving throughout your system.
What if instead of simply asking for a security key or credential to gain access, our applications, workloads, and resources asked "Who are you and how can you prove that?" Humans can move towards leveraging our non-changing characteristics, like biometrics. But what about machines? Especially in the world where pods and workloads last for only hours or days?
Attend this session to:
- Better communicate about why we must do things differently and soon
- Learn how the open-source software community has looked at addressing the identity problem
- Understand what commercial options are available
- Map a path away from the world of long-lived credentials
The future of identity and access management is the future of security, IT, and, ultimately, business resiliency.
Dwayne has been working as a Developer Advocate since 2014 and has been involved in tech communities since 2005. His entire mission is to “help people figure stuff out.” He loves sharing his knowledge, and he has done so by giving talks at hundreds of events worldwide. He has been fortunate enough to speak at institutions like MIT and Stanford and internationally in Paris and Iceland. Dwayne currently lives in Chicago. Outside of tech, he loves karaoke, live music, and crochet.
On LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/dwaynemcdaniel/