1Passwords next chapter is all about securing everything legacy tools miss - 9to5Mac

1Password is an app I’ve been using since 2008, but it’s not longer just an app.It is building a platform for how work actually happens today.That includes personal devices, AI agents, and apps that never went through the IT team.

With new updates to its Extended Access Management platform and a partnership with Drata, 1Password is moving beyond vaults to help companies stay secure without slowing anyone down.Some of my favorite gear Aqara Smart Lock U50 Upgrade your doors with Apple Home Key and the Aqara U50.Solving the access trust gap Modern work is messy from an IT perspective.

Employees use their own devices.Teams add new tools without waiting for approval because it only takes a credit card.We’re in the early days, but AI agents are starting to automate real work like logging into systems, pulling data, and kicking off workflows.

Most legacy tools were built for a world of managed devices, corporate networks, and apps only behind the single sign-on.That world is gone, and it’s not coming back What is new in 1Password Extended Access Management The updates to 1Password’s Extended Access Manager adds quite a bit, but at the center of it is visibility.The platform gives IT and security teams a way to see what apps people are using, what devices they are using, and how secure those devices really are.

Here is a quick look at what is new: App Launcher gives employees one place to access the apps they need, whether or not they are officially managed.IT can still enforce security without getting in the way.Device Compliance lets companies enforce health checks on devices before access is granted.

It works across both corporate and personal machines.Access Governance helps IT discover shadow SaaS services, automate access reviews, and clean up no longer needed access.XAM Console aims to bring everything together for admins with one view of users, apps, and devices.

SDK for Agentic AI allows developers to securely give AI agents access to secrets, without hardcoding anything or exposing credentials.AI agents have the potential to be great, but also cause major security concerns 1Password also makes a clear bet on AI and AI agents.This is not just in terms of assistant-style bots, but real autonomous agents that make data decisions and execute tasks.

The growth we’ve seen in GenAI in the last 24 months has been insane, and it’s not likely to slow down.Some of my favorite gear eufyCam 2C Upgrade your home security with wireless cameras that includes HomeKit compatibility.The Agentic AI capabilities are designed to treat AI agents like first-class corporate agents.

Companies can now manage what these agents can access, how long that access lasts, and what they do with it.This functionality means no more hardcoded secrets or shared credentials in the agent code.It also gives teams audit logs and visibility into AI behavior, which will matter more as these tools scale.

New partnership with Drata Achieving compliance is hard, and staying compliant is even harder, than many people think the project is “done”.Most teams juggle a barrage of security questionnaires, outdated spreadsheets and docs, and constant back-and-forth with auditors.At the same time, employees are using apps that IT did not approve and logging in from devices that IT doesn’t manage.

The more flexible work becomes, the harder it is to prove you are staying within the lines.That is where the new Drata and 1Password integration comes in.Drata automates monitoring and evidence collection, while 1Password locks down access across identities, devices, and apps.

Together, they give security and compliance teams a real-time view of who has access, what devices they use, and whether it meets frameworks like SOC 2 and ISO 27001.Wrap up As RSA week nears, 1Password is coming out of the gates firing on all cylinders with a bet on the future of IT and security.1Password is not trying to replace your single sign-on tool or your device management system.

It is filling in the gaps that those tools and systems were never built to cover: unmanaged apps, personal devices, AI agents, and compliance at scale.  You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day.Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop.

Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel

Read More
Related Posts