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Identity & Access Security Bloggers Network 

Home » Security Bloggers Network » The False Sense of Security in “Successful Logins”

SBN

The False Sense of Security in “Successful Logins”

by Enzoic on April 8, 2026

Here’s why “valid access” has become one of the most dangerous blind spots in security.

For years, security strategies have been built around stopping intrusions—blocking exploits, detecting malware, and preventing lateral movement. That model made sense when attackers had to break into environments.

But that’s no longer how most attacks succeed.

Recent research from the Red Canary 2026 Threat Detection Report highlights a fundamental shift: attackers are increasingly gaining access through valid identities. In other words, they’re not bypassing authentication—they’re passing it.

That changes everything.

Because when an attacker logs in with the right credentials, most security systems treat that activity as legitimate. The very control designed to protect access becomes the mechanism that enables it.

The Data Behind the Shift to Identity-Based Attacks

The numbers reinforce this shift. Identity-based threats now account for roughly 53% of detections, and identity-related activity has surged dramatically year over year—including an 850% increase in identity threats. Just as importantly, the most common attack technique involves the use of valid accounts to access systems.

That’s a meaningful change in how attacks work.

Instead of exploiting vulnerabilities, attackers are leveraging authentication itself. They already have what they need—a working username and password—and in many cases, even MFA approval. There’s no need to force entry when the front door is unlocked.

Why “Successful Login” Is the Most Misleading Signal in Security

Most security tools are designed to identify what looks wrong. Failed logins, unusual locations, malware execution, and abnormal behavior all trigger alerts because they deviate from expected patterns.

A successful login does the opposite. It confirms that everything appears normal.

But that assumption no longer holds.

A successful login today may be backed by credentials that were exposed months ago in a breach, harvested by infostealer malware, or reused across multiple systems. None of that is visible at the moment of authentication. From the system’s perspective, the login is valid.

And that’s the problem.

Authentication confirms that a credential works. It does not confirm that the person using it should be trusted.

How Attackers Turn Valid Credentials Into Access

The rise of credential-based attacks isn’t driven by a single technique. It’s driven by availability.

Credentials are constantly being exposed—through breaches, phishing, and malware—while, everyday password reuse makes those exposures more dangerous. Once exposed, they don’t disappear. They are collected, aggregated, and reused across different targets.

By the time those credentials are used against an organization, they are fully functional. The login succeeds because the credential is correct, not because the access is legitimate.

This is why identity has become the primary attack surface. It sits in front of everything—cloud platforms, SaaS applications, internal systems—and access to identity often means access to everything behind it.

Why These Attacks Are So Hard to Catch

Credential-based attacks expose a structural gap in how security systems operate.

Detection tools are built to identify malicious activity. But when an attacker uses valid credentials, the activity often looks identical to normal user behavior—at least initially. There’s no exploit, no malware signature, and no obvious anomaly to trigger an alert.

Even when suspicious signals do appear later, they are often buried in a flood of identity-related events. Security teams are left trying to distinguish real threats from noise, often after access has already been established.

This is what makes identity-based attacks so effective. They don’t need to evade detection—they simply operate within the boundaries of what is already trusted.

The Problem Starts Before the Login

Most security strategies focus on what happens during or after authentication. They evaluate login behavior, monitor sessions, and respond to anomalies.

But they rarely address a more fundamental question: should the credential have worked in the first place?

In many cases, the risk is introduced long before the login occurs. A password is exposed in a breach. It’s reused across accounts. It becomes part of a dataset that attackers can access and test at scale.

By the time it is used to authenticate, the damage is already done.

This is the missing piece in many identity security strategies that don’t account for credential exposure. Without visibility into credential exposure, organizations are left allowing access without understanding whether the credential itself is already compromised.

Why This Problem Is Getting Worse

Several factors are accelerating this trend.

Organizations now rely on identity for access to nearly everything, dramatically increasing the number of authentication points. At the same time, the volume of exposed credentials continues to grow, fueled by breaches and infostealer malware. Attackers are also operating more efficiently, using automation and AI to validate and reuse credentials at scale.

Perhaps most importantly, credential risk is persistent. Unlike vulnerabilities, exposed passwords don’t fix themselves. They can remain valid and usable long after they’ve been compromised.

The result is a growing number of attacks that look completely legitimate at the point of entry.

Rethinking Trust in Authentication

For decades, successful authentication has been treated as a signal of trust. If a user can log in, they are assumed to be legitimate.

That assumption no longer holds.

Today, a successful login simply means the credential is correct. It does not guarantee that the credential is safe, that it hasn’t been exposed, or that it isn’t being used by an attacker.

This requires a shift in how organizations think about identity security. Authentication should not be the end of the decision-making process—it should be the beginning of risk evaluation.

From Detection to Credential Integrity

This is where many identity strategies fall short. They validate credentials—but they don’t validate whether those credentials have already been exposed.

Improving detection and response remains critical. But it is no longer sufficient on its own.

Organizations also need to address the root of the problem: credential integrity.

That means ensuring that compromised credentials cannot be used in the first place. It means identifying exposed passwords before they are used for authentication. And it means continuously identifying exposed credentials and preventing their use, rather than treating it as a one-time event.

Because if a credential is already compromised, authentication only serves to validate the attacker.

The Real Issue Isn’t Access

Identity-based attacks are not just increasing—they are redefining how access is gained.

The data shows that attackers are relying on valid credentials, and organizations are working to improve detection and response. But as long as successful logins are treated as inherently trustworthy, a critical blind spot will remain.

Because in today’s threat landscape, the most dangerous activity may not look suspicious at all.

It may look like a normal login.

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Blog | Enzoic authored by Enzoic. Read the original post at: https://www.enzoic.com/blog/successful-logins/

April 8, 2026April 8, 2026 Enzoic account takeover, Active Directory, Password Security
  • ← The Era of Agentic Security is Here: Key Findings from the 1H 2026 State of AI and API Security Report
  • AI Security Risks: How Enterprises Manage LLM, Shadow AI and Agentic Threats – FireTail Blog →

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