Syndicated Blog

[su_panel border="1px solid #ddd" radius="3" text_align="center"]
Enzoic
Detect Compromised Credentials
[/su_panel]

The Login Was the Breach

For years, Active Directory breaches were associated with exploit chains, malware, lateral movement, and ransomware deployment. The assumption was simple: attackers had to break through security controls before they could gain access ...

Summer Is Prime Time for Account Takeover

Vacation season creates ideal conditions for ATO. See how credential exposure, infostealer malware, and slower response times increase risk ...
DBIR 2026 Picture1

The 2026 Verizon DBIR

The latest Verizon DBIR and once again, Enzoic is proud to be a contributor, providing data on password complexity and compromise rates ...

Can CTEM Apply to Credential Security

How CTEM applies to credential security, compromised passwords, and identity exposure—and how Enzoic helps reduce credential-based risk ...
2) Monitoring Policies

CMMC Level 2

How stronger Active Directory password controls support CMMC Level 2 compliance, reduce password reuse, and prevent credential-based attacks ...
2) Monitoring Policies

CMMC Level 2

How stronger Active Directory password controls support CMMC Level 2 compliance, reduce password reuse, and prevent credential-based attacks ...

Hybrid Authentication Environments

Reduce credential risk in hybrid authentication environments by securing the password layer that remains alongside passkeys ...

Native Active Directory Password Policies Still Fail Modern Attacks

How Active Directory modern attacks exploit credential exposure—not just weak passwords For years, organizations have relied on native Active Directory password policies as the foundation of identity security. Minimum length requirements, character ...

The False Sense of Security in “Successful Logins”

Successful logins can hide compromised credentials. Learn why valid access has become a major blind spot in identity security ...

2026 SANS Identity Threats Report: Why Attacks Still Work

SANS findings highlight the real issue, compromised credentials enable access long before traditional security controls detect a problem ...