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Many CA-folks attended the Burton Group Catalyst conference a couple of weeks ago. Not to be a shill for Burton, but I have always found this conference to be one of the most informative of all the major industry events. The sessions typically have more depth than most conferences, and there are a number of specific customer case studies that help to show how IAM is being successfully deployed in real-life (and complex) environments. End of shameless plug for Catalyst.
There are multiple “tracks” in the Burton Conference, including ones on threat management, application security, and identity management. There was also a conference welcome session, at which Jamie Lewis (President of Burton Group) summarized some of the key security trends that have been occurring over the past year. As he went through them, it was quite noticeable how central IAM was in virtually all of these trends. One could certainly argue that this is due in some respects to Burton’s emphasis and expertise in this area. Even while acknowledging this fact, it seems clear that many of the recent security trends can be associated with a strong movement towards management of user identities and access across large environments. Let me highlight the major ones listed so we can see how these trends are impacted by IAM technologies.
So, when we look at some of the key security trends over the past year or more, IAM technologies are extremely well-suited to meet the challenges created by these trends. And, conversely, these evolving customer demands have caused changes in the IAM product space also. Simple examples include the rise of GRC solutions and identity auditing as natural outgrowths of the success of the core IAM technologies. Another insight from this session was how much change had occurred in the IAM market over the past year or so. This is true not only in terms of acquisitions as well as new entrants, but also in the breadth of scope that the identity management market includes. For those of us who have been in the IAM market for a number of years, this constant flux has become very familiar to us. In addition, this is very unlikely to change in the near term at all—identity management has become a constantly evolving market in which a high rate of change is now the norm. Continual change is one of the many reasons why many of us find this area to be so exciting.
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