Privileged Access Management (PAM) is one of the most-discussed topics in presentations, tech shows, IT forums, IT groups, blogs, and meetings in the past few years (since 2014) when it comes to identity management. It has become a trending topic, especially after the Windows Server 2016 preview releases. In 2016, I traveled to several cities in several countries and found myself involved in many presentations and discussions about PAM.
First of all, this is not a feature you can enable with a few clicks. It is a combination of many technologies and methodologies that come together and make a workflow or, in other words, way of living for administrators. AD DS 2016 includes features and capabilities supporting PAM in the infrastructure, but it is not the only thing it has. This is one of the greatest challenges I see about this new way of thinking...