SINGAPORE, 19 JUNE 2026 – Spotting a security vulnerability is one thing. Fixing it quickly enough to matter is another challenge entirely. Keeper Security, the zero-trust and zero-knowledge privileged access management platform, has taken direct aim at that gap with a new integration with Wiz, the cloud and AI security platform now operating under the Google Cloud umbrella.
The partnership joins Keeper to the Wiz Integration Network, establishing KeeperPAM as the designated remediation engine for identity security vulnerabilities surfaced by Wiz. In practical terms, when Wiz detects an identity-related risk — whether it involves a human user, a machine identity, an autonomous AI agent, or a database account — that finding is automatically pushed into Keeper’s Cloud Security dashboard, where security teams can review and act on it without switching platforms, manually triaging alerts, or executing remediation steps separately.
The integration arrives at a moment when cloud environments are becoming exponentially more complex. The rapid proliferation of Non-Human Identities, the growth of autonomous AI agents operating across cloud infrastructure, and the persistent problem of over-privileged service accounts have all expanded the attack surface that security teams must manage. Wiz brings broad cloud visibility to that challenge. Keeper brings the remediation muscle.
Keeper Security CTO and Co-founder Craig Lurey framed the collaboration in terms of completing a circuit that has historically been left open. Finding a vulnerability, he said, is only half the battle. What the integration delivers is the ability to rotate compromised credentials, enforce privileged access controls, and reduce over-permissioned identities at the moment of discovery rather than hours or days later — turning detection power into decisive risk reduction.
The mechanics of the integration centre on a real-time workflow. Once a Wiz customer enables the Keeper integration, Wiz continuously scans the cloud environment for identity vulnerabilities within Keeper’s remediation scope. Security teams can then select any finding and trigger the appropriate action through KeeperPAM — rotating compromised credentials, bringing unmanaged accounts under governance, reducing excessive privileges for users and IAM roles, or mapping findings to existing PAM records. Each resolution is submitted back to Wiz to close the loop on the original finding, creating a verifiable chain of custody from initial detection through to corrective action.
The result is a measurable reduction in Mean Time to Remediation — the metric that determines how long a vulnerability remains exploitable before it is addressed. By collapsing the gap between discovery and resolution, the integration shrinks the window during which a threat actor could act on an exposed identity or over-privileged account.
The integration carries particular weight in AI-native environments, where autonomous agents and service accounts can accumulate excessive permissions across cloud infrastructure at a pace that outstrips manual oversight. Wiz’s AI Application Protection Platform detects over-privileged AI agents and insecure service configurations, while KeeperPAM enforces least-privilege policies and enables just-in-time access controls in response — together securing the full AI lifecycle from code to runtime without requiring manual intervention.
Wiz VP of Product, Extensibility and Partnerships Oron Noah described the partnership as a natural extension of what both platforms do best, bringing cloud visibility and access management into a unified workflow so that teams can secure human and machine identities at scale with greater confidence and less friction.
KeeperPAM is available now with the Wiz integration enabled. Full release notes are accessible through Keeper’s documentation portal.
