We've talked about personal password management here but how do you guys manage your passwords at a company wide level?
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We have managed to plan our company applications so they are mainly web based and open source or in-house developed. This then allowed us to use LDAP to hook into active directory for logging into our intranet. From there we modified the logins into various products we use (MediaWiki, Wordpress, SugarCRM etc.) so that if the user is authenticated in the intranet, they are automatically logged into these other products as well. This has taken some time setting up the process and creating a script to set all the appropriate user details in each system when someone joins the company, however now we have a situation where everyone only has to remember one password, removing the need for managing a growing list of passwords. Obviously this may not be viable in many companies, but now that we have it setup it was worth the effort. |
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We use Password Agent: http://www.moonsoftware.com/pwagent.asp It stores everything from PC admin logins to website logins and product keys for products we all use. |
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Obviously I'm biased because I work there, but we use Enterprise Random Password Manager from Lieberman Software. Yes, we do actually dogfood our own tool in our own network. It has some nice features, like web accessibility with delegation, scheduled operation with retry, propagation to other things using accounts (services, COM+ apps, etc.), system/account discovery, Linux/Unix account management, etc. I'm sure a salesperson could give a better pitch, but that I am not. I'd encourage you to check it out. :) |
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We maintain an in-house Lotus Notes database that stores absolutely everything from passwords to server change records. It is big, cumbersome, takes an age to load, and is generally not, uh, nice. No, this is not a sane way to do it. :-| |
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For passwords related to my work, I store them in a plain unencrypted This is a very different security model than what I use for my personal passwords, of course. |
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Just a heads up: Microsoft have a product managing credentials/passwords/identity across varied systems: Identity Lifecycle Manager |
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We use Active Directory to store user credentials, and developed custom library for Desktop and Web |
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We had a look at a product that had these features:
Unfortunately, I can't remember it's name. |
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I thought I'd report back after my week of searching... I've settled on PassPack I've been using it for a few days now for my personal passwords and I'm a total fanboy. They use the Host-Proof Hosting pattern so the only one that can access your stuff is you and if you forget your password they can't help you. They have some nice Offline apps written with Adobe AIR and Google Gears. But, best of all, they fit my "enterprise" requirement because an upcoming release will support sharing within a trusted group. Plus, I learned about The "Blog" of "Unnecessary" Quotation Marks in their forum. |
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Secret Server is something that grew from an internal need (within our software company) to a viable product that is now used all over the world. It is web-based and allows you to store passwords and then securely share them with other users and groups (even AD users and groups). It is also able to actively reach out and change passwords on automatic schedules, even handling associated dependencies such as Windows Services for service accounts. Enterprise Password Management (free 30 day trial). |
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