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Recommended Event: CyberRisk Appliance: Identiverse - Las Vegas, Nevada, June 15-18, 2026

Recommended Event: CyberRisk Appliance: Identiverse - Las Vegas, Nevada, June 15-18, 2026

The Identity That Never Logs In: Securing Identities in the Age of AI Agents

Solution Category IAM
Type Webinar
Organization Segura

Webinar Description

Key Takeaways

  • Explores the security challenges of non-human identities (NHIs) in modern organizations
  • Focuses on risks and attack vectors associated with AI agents, service accounts, and automation pipelines
  • Highlights the limitations of traditional IAM and PAM for autonomous systems
  • Shares practical strategies for improving visibility, governance, and auditability of AI-driven activity
  • Features expert insights, real-world examples, and a live Q&A session

As organizations accelerate their adoption of AI-driven automation, a new class of security risk has emerged: non-human identities. These include service accounts, API keys, certificates, and autonomous AI agents—entities that operate without direct human oversight, often with persistent access across critical environments. “The Identity That Never Logs In: Securing Identities in the Age of AI Agents” brings this issue to the forefront, offering security professionals a timely look at the operational and governance challenges posed by these invisible actors.

Understanding Non-Human Identity Risk

Non-human identities now outnumber human users in many enterprise environments. Unlike traditional user accounts, these identities rarely log in through standard interfaces, making them difficult to monitor and secure. Their persistent privileges and lack of oversight create attractive targets for attackers, who increasingly exploit automation pipelines, service accounts, and API tokens to gain unauthorized access or move laterally within networks.

Why Traditional IAM and PAM Fall Short

Conventional identity and access management tools were designed with human users in mind. As a result, they often struggle to provide adequate governance for machine identities and AI agents. Persistent credentials, static entitlements, and limited visibility into automated workflows leave organizations exposed to privilege escalation and compliance gaps. The session addresses these shortcomings, emphasizing the need for adaptive controls and continuous monitoring tailored to autonomous systems.

Strategies for Securing AI-Driven Automation

Industry experts from Segura® and Elimity will share actionable guidance on reducing standing privilege, applying just-in-time access, and implementing least privilege principles for non-human identities. The discussion will cover practical steps to improve visibility into AI-driven activity, strengthen governance, and ensure auditability across complex automation environments. Real-world examples will illustrate how unified control over machine identities can help organizations stay ahead of emerging threats.

Who Should Attend

This virtual event is tailored for identity security teams, CISOs, security architects, IAM and PAM professionals, and compliance leaders. It is particularly relevant for organizations embracing AI, automation, or cloud infrastructure, as well as enterprises seeking to address the growing challenge of privileged access and machine identity management.

Event Format and Experience

The session is delivered online in a webinar format, combining expert-led presentations with a live Q&A. Attendees can expect practical insights, opportunities for direct engagement with industry leaders, and a focus on real-world solutions to the evolving landscape of identity security.

Industry Context and Relevance

As AI agents and automation pipelines become integral to business operations, the security of non-human identities is no longer a niche concern. The event underscores the urgency of adapting identity governance frameworks to address these new realities, positioning itself at the intersection of application security and identity management. With the majority of privileged identities now belonging to machines rather than people, the conversation is both timely and essential for forward-thinking security teams.