Delivery director at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Real User
Top 20
2024-09-16T03:08:00Z
Sep 16, 2024
My clients, who are mostly North American clients like SpartanNash and CFI, use Delinea Secret Server for maintaining privileged passwords for their service accounts. Delinea also includes privileged session monitoring and keystroke logging, which is similar to CyberArk.
We've used it for auto-discovery, and password management on mainframes, networks, applications, and firewalls. We've also used it for password rotation. We use it for credential management, including rotation for both human and non-human accounts, as well as session monitoring.
We use the solution to control privileged accounts in our organization. We use it to discover and track privileged account usage and to ensure accountability. For example, we can use Delinea Secret Server to see who registers accounts and when.
I need to look at using their tool's true multi-tenancy capability to cater to multiple customers within a single platform architecture without compromising security. Information security is key, and an MSP model's objective is to have a privileged access management solution. Secret Server is called a secret server for a reason. You can create multiple secret servers underneath the parent for every secret server. Every "parent" will be considered as one customer, secret server #1, secret server #2, etc. Under every secret server, you can create multiple secret servers. Those secrets will belong to customers A, B, and C, respectively. If I want to access a customer's Windows environment under a secret server, I will create a secret group called "Windows." This group will be onboarded with customer A's Windows environments within their secret server. We have a logically separated environment as an MSP model.
I use it for laboratory practice before implementing it for end-users. Specifically, I use the Linux server to discover related accounts in our domain, pull them into the solution, manage their passwords, carry out session monitoring, and practice workflow, which allows for leading access to better-trained individuals when needed. I also make presentations to clients concerning this type of solution.
Senior System Analyst at a government with 1,001-5,000 employees
Reseller
Top 20
2023-03-24T11:37:23Z
Mar 24, 2023
We are selling this solution. Different customers have different use cases for it, which vary from our own. We do not use it for our organization; rather, we deploy and configure it for our customers to whom we sell it.
Head of Platform Engineering at Ascend Group Co., Ltd.
Real User
Top 10
2023-03-15T07:16:29Z
Mar 15, 2023
We use Delinea Secret Server for pharmacy equipment management. We use a secret vault. We use it as a temporary hold, and we use it for password rotation.
Technical Account Manager (Information Security) at Trustaira
Reseller
Top 10
2022-10-03T12:52:09Z
Oct 3, 2022
We primarily use the solution for privileged access management. Delinea Secret Server is like a vault for the users to store their device passwords and is also used for auditing sessions monitoring password production, et cetera.
Our clients use this solution to manage privileged accounts, meaning their administrative accounts. Whether it's active directories, co-banking solutions, or databases, the solution will take over all the privileged accounts on the network or in the infrastructure.
Senior Product Manager and Technology Consultant at Barikat
Reseller
Top 10
2022-05-25T15:49:00Z
May 25, 2022
The primary use case for Delinea Secret Server is to sort the privileged passwords. It can also change passwords after a set period or revoke passwords when someone leaves the company. Delinea needs to be on-premises because Turkish regulations do not allow cloud-based security solutions for some sectors.
Program Manager at a recruiting/HR firm with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
2022-01-04T21:51:33Z
Jan 4, 2022
We recently had to reset every company password globally, which I am in the process of undertaking at the moment. It seems to be working well for us. While we did encounter several glitches, I believe this owed itself to the solution not having been fully deployed, even though they owned it for some time. We have since deployed it fully and are learning as we go, especially as concerns the various international laws, such as the GDPR. Yet, it works well for us.
Secret Server is a fully-featured Privileged Access Management (PAM) solution available both on premise and in the cloud. It empowers security and IT ops teams to secure and manage all types of privileged accounts and offers the fastest time to value of any PAM solution.
My clients, who are mostly North American clients like SpartanNash and CFI, use Delinea Secret Server for maintaining privileged passwords for their service accounts. Delinea also includes privileged session monitoring and keystroke logging, which is similar to CyberArk.
We use the solution to store the password for critical server applications.
We have implemented the product in our system environment and configured it extensively to manage privileged accounts and enhance security.
We've used it for auto-discovery, and password management on mainframes, networks, applications, and firewalls. We've also used it for password rotation. We use it for credential management, including rotation for both human and non-human accounts, as well as session monitoring.
It works for us, and the administration part, while functional, seems less straightforward, especially during upgrades. That's what I've noticed.
We use the solution to control privileged accounts in our organization. We use it to discover and track privileged account usage and to ensure accountability. For example, we can use Delinea Secret Server to see who registers accounts and when.
I need to look at using their tool's true multi-tenancy capability to cater to multiple customers within a single platform architecture without compromising security. Information security is key, and an MSP model's objective is to have a privileged access management solution. Secret Server is called a secret server for a reason. You can create multiple secret servers underneath the parent for every secret server. Every "parent" will be considered as one customer, secret server #1, secret server #2, etc. Under every secret server, you can create multiple secret servers. Those secrets will belong to customers A, B, and C, respectively. If I want to access a customer's Windows environment under a secret server, I will create a secret group called "Windows." This group will be onboarded with customer A's Windows environments within their secret server. We have a logically separated environment as an MSP model.
We use the solution for automatic password rotation and managing system admin and database access.
I use it for laboratory practice before implementing it for end-users. Specifically, I use the Linux server to discover related accounts in our domain, pull them into the solution, manage their passwords, carry out session monitoring, and practice workflow, which allows for leading access to better-trained individuals when needed. I also make presentations to clients concerning this type of solution.
We are selling this solution. Different customers have different use cases for it, which vary from our own. We do not use it for our organization; rather, we deploy and configure it for our customers to whom we sell it.
We use Delinea Secret Server for pharmacy equipment management. We use a secret vault. We use it as a temporary hold, and we use it for password rotation.
We primarily use the solution for privileged access management. Delinea Secret Server is like a vault for the users to store their device passwords and is also used for auditing sessions monitoring password production, et cetera.
We use Delinea Secret Server for password rotations for end-point access.
Our clients use this solution to manage privileged accounts, meaning their administrative accounts. Whether it's active directories, co-banking solutions, or databases, the solution will take over all the privileged accounts on the network or in the infrastructure.
I use Delinea Secret Server for demonstration purposes while talking to clients, for internet access management, and user monitoring.
The primary use case for Delinea Secret Server is to sort the privileged passwords. It can also change passwords after a set period or revoke passwords when someone leaves the company. Delinea needs to be on-premises because Turkish regulations do not allow cloud-based security solutions for some sectors.
We recently had to reset every company password globally, which I am in the process of undertaking at the moment. It seems to be working well for us. While we did encounter several glitches, I believe this owed itself to the solution not having been fully deployed, even though they owned it for some time. We have since deployed it fully and are learning as we go, especially as concerns the various international laws, such as the GDPR. Yet, it works well for us.
We use the most updated version. One of our customers wanted automation in respect of the solution.
I'm working in India in a private IT firm and we are working as a consultant for Thycotic, and Azure Development.