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Delinea Secret Server

Delinea Secret Server
Formerly Thycotic Secret Server

Overview

What is Delinea Secret Server?

Secret Server (originally from Thycotic, now from Delinea since the 2021 Thycotic merger with Centrify) is an enterprise password management application, which is available with either a cloud-based or on-premise deployment which emphasizes fast deployment, scalability, and simplicity.

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Recent Reviews

TrustRadius Insights

Easy to use: Reviewers have consistently praised Secret Server for its user-friendly interface and intuitive navigation. Many users have …
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Rotate with Thychotoc

9 out of 10
February 15, 2022
Incentivized
We use Thychotic Secret Server for privilege access management. All our admin and service accounts are managed through the software. We …
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Secret Server

10 out of 10
January 30, 2020
Incentivized
Our IT department utilizes Secret Server to store our passwords for our privileged accounts. There are several departments we currently …
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Product Demos

Secret Server's Vaulting Capabilities | Product Demo

YouTube

Secret Server Demo

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Product Details

What is Delinea Secret Server?

Secret Server is a Privileged Account Management (PAM) solution available both on premise and in the cloud. It empowers security and IT ops teams to secure and manage all types of privileged accounts.

The software gives security and IT ops teams the agility to secure and manage all types of privileges, protecting administrator, service, application, and root accounts from cyber attack. Store privileged credentials in an encrypted, centralized vault.

The vendor states that unlike traditional, complex PAM solutions, Secret Server works the way users work, starting with a rapid deployment and giving users direct control to customize as they grow.

Secret Server aims to enable organizations to:

Improve Security Posture: Protecting privileged accounts helps businesses tighten their attack surface and build resilience against other causes of disruption

Minimize Complexity & Maintain Productivity - Secret Server is presented as fast to deploy and easy to use, unburdening IT teams.

Experience Enterprise-Class Performance - According to the vendor, Delinea secures privileged accounts for more than 10,000 organizations worldwide, including Fortune 500 enterprises and is deployed on the largest networks in the world.

Delinea Secret Server Features

  • Supported: Secure Vault and Password Manager with AD Integration
  • Supported: Discover Local and Active Directory Privileged Accounts
  • Supported: Automatic Password Changing for Network Accounts
  • Supported: Enhanced Auditing & Reporting
  • Supported: Service Account and Dependency Management

Delinea Secret Server Technical Details

Deployment TypesOn-premise, Software as a Service (SaaS), Cloud, or Web-Based
Operating SystemsWindows
Mobile ApplicationApple iOS, Android, Windows Phone, Blackberry, Mobile Web

Frequently Asked Questions

Secret Server (originally from Thycotic, now from Delinea since the 2021 Thycotic merger with Centrify) is an enterprise password management application, which is available with either a cloud-based or on-premise deployment which emphasizes fast deployment, scalability, and simplicity.

BeyondTrust Password Safe, Delinea Server PAM, and CyberArk Privileged Access Management are common alternatives for Delinea Secret Server.

Reviewers rate Support Rating highest, with a score of 6.

The most common users of Delinea Secret Server are from Mid-sized Companies (51-1,000 employees).
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Comparisons

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Reviews and Ratings

(37)

Community Insights

TrustRadius Insights are summaries of user sentiment data from TrustRadius reviews and, when necessary, 3rd-party data sources. Have feedback on this content? Let us know!

Based on user reviews, here are the common recommendations for the software:

  1. Try the free version or free trial to test if it meets your needs.

  2. Evaluate the software in your own environment before making a decision.

  3. Consider using alternative browsers like Chrome instead of Firefox for better performance.

  4. Report any bugs experienced to help improve the software.

These recommendations offer valuable insights for potential users to consider when evaluating the software's suitability for their organization.

Attribute Ratings

Reviews

(1-2 of 2)
Companies can't remove reviews or game the system. Here's why
January 30, 2020

Secret Server

Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Our IT department utilizes Secret Server to store our passwords for our privileged accounts. There are several departments we currently support the use of Secret Server for.
  • Role-Based access. Users only have access to the secrets they need within their department based on their role.
  • Secret Server authenticates with Active Directory for easy connectivity.
  • It can be difficult at times figuring out how to architect a new group within the solution. Often times it takes a couple attempts to get it right.
Secret Server is a great tool for privileged access management. Not only can you securely store passwords, but users can access their servers within this solution without ever having to view or enter the password.
  • Privileged Password Safe. Great for keeping those super important passwords all in one place.
  • The solution has amazing logging reports. As an admin you can see what actions users take, whether they view a secret or display the password.
We've used Secret Server for years and don't have a valid reason to go away from it.
The support team is great. They'll even answer some questions if your support has lapsed. Of course, they'll also remind you that you need to re-up your support.
Robert Paul | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
We currently use Secret Server within the IT department only. It keeps track of all of our shared passwords— systems, websites, support sites—in one centrally located, secure place. The department used to use a shared desktop application that was hard to keep up to date, and frequently resulted in passwords being recorded elsewhere unofficially, and as less secure.
  • Password Management: Its entire purpose, really. Secret Server stores passwords in an incredibly easy to use way. They can be organized in groups, they contain all the information about the site or system the password is used for (including URLs for websites), and even a notes field. You can set up specific policies for expirations and complexity, and Secret Server can even generate strong passwords for you. Using a password is simple, too, since you can just click a button to add it to your clipboard; you don't even have to unmask the password.
  • Security: The passwords are stored encrypted in a SQL database, and the application requires an authenticated login. This could be local, but we tie it into Active Directory. Each folder of passwords has groups assigned (in our case, again, AD, but you can make them local groups) with different permission levels, so we can compartmentalize passwords. Desktop technicians don't have access to network switch passwords, etc.
  • Easy Setup: It took me about an hour to get the server running, from spinning up the VM to importing our old password list. It took a little longer to organize the passwords into proper folders, and then assigning groups, but it was easy to do.
  • Personal Passwords: Each user also gets a personal folder, where they can keep their own, unshared passwords. This is nice for sites or systems with individualized logins (e.g., a firewall, VPN, etc.)
  • Favorites: Secret Server lets you tag passwords as "favorites" so you can easily find ones you use constantly. The search feature is nice, but this is nicer.
  • Granularity in Security Groups: Groups can be assigned per folder, and different groups can have different permissions, but sometimes there are groups of passwords where only some of them should be visible to some users, and there's no good way to organize that. The best way right now is subfolders, which works, but it can clunky if you have a lot of cases like that.
  • Direct URL Logins: Secret Server has a feature where, if it works, lets you click the resource link in the list, which should take you to the site directly and log you in. However, in the years I've used this, it has never worked. I always get a weird application redirection error.
  • Default Policies: Some of the default expiration/complexity policies are annoying. I recognize that they are trying to meet best practices, but in many cases this is impractical. I end up having to turn off the default policy altogether and do this manually or with my own policy that I can apply later.
Secret Server is really a great solution for any business that needs more than one person to have access to passwords for various devices, systems, and websites. Even an organization with only one person who would need access, if that person was no longer around, a simple change in Active Directory could assign those permissions to their successor. Candidly, the only scenario I can think of where a business might not want Secret Server would be a sole-proprietorship that was unconcerned with succession or security in general. The free version has no cost beyond using a server, and it's pretty low overhead.
  • The best return on investment is that all of our passwords are now up to date and usable by everyone in the department. The old way could only be accessed by one person at a time, and it was frequently wrong.
  • We save a lot of time in IT by having the passwords easily accessible. We also meet our security audit objectives by using this app instead of, say, an Excel spreadsheet or an old application that is no longer supported, as was the case at a previous workplace.
  • With the size of our department, we don't have enough passwords to go beyond the free version. It's fully functional, but it costs nothing (except some resources on a VM). ROI on free can't be beat.
KeePass is fine for individual use, but it does not meet the same objectives. There are a lot of products like KeePass that are just not as portable or robust, and do not have the kind of granularity Secret Server has. Being able to assign password permissions based on user roles is huge, especially from a security standpoint.
Duo Security, Veeam Backup & Replication, Site24x7
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