

Cloud directory-as-a-service provider JumpCloud Inc. has reset admin application programming interface keys for customers due to an unspecified “ongoing incident.”
Exactly what the ongoing incident is was not specified. A notice sent to customers stated only that the company was resetting the API keys out of an abundance of caution. “We have done this to protect your organization and operations,” a message sent to affected customers reads. “We apologize for any disruption this causes you and your organization, but the action was taken on your behalf as the most prudent course of action.”
@troyhunt this seems ominous from @JumpCloud pic.twitter.com/Pu0keIHqSK
— Lee (@leereichardt) July 5, 2023
A further notice on JumpCloud’s support site does not provide any additional details on the incident. The support page provides details on how JumpCloud admins using an API key can access a new one.
JumpCloud’s service offers simplified directory management for companies that have multiple user directories or that don’t want to go to the trouble of installing their own. Pitched as a modern replacement for Microsoft Corp.’s Active Directory service, JumpCloud’s directory provides core identity and access control services, multifactor authentication, single sign-on and integration with other popular directories.
Without knowing what is going on, Scott Gerlach, co-founder and chief security officer at API security testing company StackHawk Inc., told SiliconANGLE that companies do not take actions such as resetting API keys lightly.
“I’m sure if JumpCloud is dealing with a security incident, the work is not simple and protecting customers and the integrity of their authentication is their first priority,” Gerlach explained. “This work is never easy and lots of great people are probably very busy and stressed.”
Jason Kent, hacker in residence at unified API protection company Cequence Security Inc., also noted that the decision to reset the API keys would not have been taken lightly because “IT and cyber security professionals don’t like redoing work and having to go set keys on various systems and wait for reports of successes and failures.”
Chase Doelling, principal strategist at JumpCloud, spoke with theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media Inc.’s live streaming studio, in September, on how the company consolidates different security technologies using an open directory platform:
THANK YOU