Privilege-based threats continues to evolve, increase in volume and complexity, and test the limits of existing security controls and solution implementations. And today, almost every security breach involves some aspect of privilege/privileged access—whether it be the initial point of compromise, or lateral movement and escalation of privileges once a threat actor has breached the network perimeter, or compromised an endpoint or identity.

Join Morey J Haber, BeyondTrust CTO and CISO, in this on-demand webinar to explore how privileges, insecure credentials—both human and machine, administrative rights, and remote access can be combined as an attack vector to breach any organization. Haber will also share insights from the recently released 2nd edition of his book Privileged Attack Vectors, including:




Photograph of Morey J. Haber

Morey J. Haber, Chief Security Advisor

Morey J. Haber is the Chief Security Advisor at BeyondTrust. As the Chief Security Advisor, Morey is the lead identity and technical evangelist at BeyondTrust. He has more than 25 years of IT industry experience and has authored four books: Privileged Attack Vectors, Asset Attack Vectors, Identity Attack Vectors, and Cloud Attack Vectors. Morey has previously served as BeyondTrust’s Chief Security Officer, Chief Technology, and Vice President of Product Management during his nearly 12-year tenure. In 2020, Morey was elected to the Identity Defined Security Alliance (IDSA) Executive Advisory Board, assisting the corporate community with identity security best practices. He originally joined BeyondTrust in 2012 as a part of the acquisition of eEye Digital Security, where he served as a Product Owner and Solutions Engineer, since 2004. Prior to eEye, he was Beta Development Manager for Computer Associates, Inc. He began his career as Reliability and Maintainability Engineer for a government contractor building flight and training simulators. Morey earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering from the State University of New York at Stony Brook.

Prefers reduced motion setting detected. Animations will now be reduced as a result.