Best Privileged Access Management Software for Linux - Page 2

Compare the Top Privileged Access Management Software for Linux as of April 2026 - Page 2

  • 1
    Iraje Privileged Access Manager
    Privileged accounts exist everywhere. There are many types of privileged accounts and they can exist on-premises and in the cloud. They differ from other accounts as they have rights for read, write, alter, and modify. Privileged Access Management (PAM) refers to systems that secure, control, manage and monitor the accounts of users who have elevated permissions to critical, corporate assets. Anyone inside an organization with superuser privileges has the potential to crash your enterprise systems, destroy data, delete or create accounts and change passwords and cause havoc, either through carelessness, incompetence or perhaps through malicious intent. The trouble is that accounts with superuser privileges, Including shared accounts, are necessary. One cannot run enterprise IT systems without granting some people the privileges to do system-level tasks.
  • 2
    1Password Extended Access Management (XAM)
    1Password Extended Access Management (XAM) is a security solution designed to safeguard every login across applications and devices, making it ideal for hybrid work environments. It combines user identity verification, device trust assessments, enterprise password management, and application insights to ensure that only authorized users on secure devices can access both approved and unapproved applications. By providing IT and security teams with visibility into app usage, including shadow IT, XAM enables organizations to enforce contextual access policies based on real-time risk signals like device compliance and credential integrity. With its zero-trust approach, XAM helps businesses move beyond traditional identity management, strengthening security in today’s SaaS-driven workplace.
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