During every school year, faculty members resign, students graduate and staff are terminated. However, when a student or an employee leaves the school, who makes sure their accounts are deactivated and deleted?
When user accounts become inactive, obsolete or abandoned, they must be deleted for security and compliance reasons. On dormant accounts, unusual activity could go unnoticed and undetected for quite some time, potentially causing significant risks to a school’s network.
Stale user accounts, especially in Active Directory, are one of the biggest concerns for IT. Here are 3 ways your school can do to prevent and eliminate inactive and orphaned user accounts:
Dormant and obsolete accounts in Active Directory can serve as a gateway for attackers. These accounts can sit unnoticed and undetected for quite some time, that is until a hacker attempts to gain unauthorized access and potentially threatens to exploit sensitive information. Minimize and avoid these types of security risks by implementing the best practices above.
Let us know if you’re searching more advice on how you can protect your school from the potential hazards of stale logins, old passwords and inactive accounts.
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Orphan Accounts. What’s the Big Deal?