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OpenWeb Achieves Least Privileges with Automated JIT Access

OpenWeb

Apono Success Story

Secure Developer Access
to Production RDS at Scale

Case study OpenWeb

Founded in 2012, OpenWeb partners with
publishers and brands to help build direct
partnerships with their audiences.

The company has raised over $390 million
in funding and has acquired 3 companies
since its establishment.

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400+

Head Count

New York, Tel Aviv, Toronto, San Diego, London, Paris, Kyiv

Locations

Enforce JIT and Just Enough Access Today

The Challenge

Secure Access At Scale

OpenWeb’s meteoric rise to success came with new security needs and a more scalable access management solution that ensure no standing privileges are risking the organization.

Effortless JIT access, loved by engineers”

We’re looking for something that will allow us to achieve our goal, which is to create a cloud environment with minimum roles, almost no roles, and provide just-in-time access for our developers and support personnel, and we looked for a solution that’s very easy to use that both developers and DevOps love.

Yaron Blachman

CTO and CISO

Apono Solution

Dynamic Access With Least Privileges By Default

Using Apono, OpenWeb is able to securely provision temporary permissions to sensitive resources that can be accessed via the company’s SSO portal (IAM Identity Center), reducing the risk of standing privileges while maintaining productivity

Reduce friction between departments

Loved by both DevOps and developers, a solution that does not disrupt operations and can be accessed by the organization’s SSO (AWS Identity Center).

Continuous access monitoring & conversion to auto-revoked policies

Monitor unused access and over-privileges with “Just-in-Time”, “Just Enough” conversion suggestions

Just-In-Time (JIT) access for developers and support personal

Auto-revoked access in accordance with OpenWeb’s access policy.

“Apono speeds up
DevOps team.”

“Before we had Apono, developers who needed access to fix something in production or look into the database actually had to connect with the DevOps team to get permissions.”

Yaron Blachman

CTO and CISO