Keeper Security Launches Slack Integration for Zero Trust

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Keeper Security has introduced a new Slack integration that brings secure, policy-based access governance into one of the world’s most widely used collaboration platforms.

Slack is widely used as a primary collaboration environment inside organizations of all sizes. As teams rely on messaging channels to handle approvals, incident response, and day-to-day coordination, Slack has become a central place for operational decisions to be initiated and tracked. As thousands of third-party integrations and a native Slack integration power Slack-based workflows, the platform has emerged as a primary workspace for operational coordination, creating a natural point to introduce access governance while keeping enforcement centralized.

The integration allows organizations to request and approve access to Keeper Vault resources, such as shared folders, service accounts, credentials and protected applications directly within Slack, while Keeper continues to operate as the system of record for access enforcement, encryption, auditing and compliance. The Slack App and Keeper Commander application containers are hosted by the customer, preserving Keeper’s zero-knowledge architecture and ensuring that the customer is in complete control over the encryption and decryption of data.

“Security breaks down when people have to step outside governed systems. We designed this integration so that Slack functions as a workflow interface, not a security boundary,” said Craig Lurey, CTO and Co-founder of Keeper Security. “Slack is where work happens. Keeper is where access is enforced. Keeping those roles separate is what lets organizations move faster without creating new risk.”

Many workflow integrations blur security boundaries in the name of convenience. Keeper took a different approach, by designing the integration around a clear separation of responsibilities: Workflow platforms initiate requests and approvals, while Keeper alone enforces access policies and cryptographic controls. This model preserves the security guarantees organizations rely on, without forcing teams to work outside their existing workflows.

By bringing access approvals into an established collaboration environment, organizations can eliminate insecure side channels such as email threads, direct messages or screenshots, all while maintaining strict least-privilege access policies and centralized governance across cloud, hybrid and on-premises environments.

With this capability, organizations can streamline access governance while maintaining full control. Requests are initiated in Slack and routed automatically to the appropriate approvers based on Keeper policies. Access is granted on a Just-in-Time (JIT) basis with no standing privileges, and every request, approval and access event is logged centrally to support audit and compliance requirements.

The Slack integration is part of Keeper’s broader platform strategy to extend zero-trust access governance into the systems of work where decisions already occur, without fragmenting security controls or introducing new attack surfaces. This approach allows organizations to modernize access workflows while keeping enforcement centralized, consistent and auditable.

“As organizations adopt more collaborative and distributed ways of working, security has to adapt without surrendering authority,” added Lurey. “This launch reflects Keeper’s long-term view of access governance as a wider platform capability, not a point integration.”

To learn more about the new Slack integration available to Keeper customers, visit the website here.

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Taylor Graham, marketing grad with an inner nature to be a perpetual researchist, currently all things IT. Personally and professionally, Taylor is one to know with her tenacity and encouraging spirit. When not working you can find her spending time with friends and family.