Keeper Security is adding a new layer to its PAM stack with ‘KeeperDB,’ set to debut at RSA Conference 2026. The idea is straightforward. Database access is still messy in most companies, and that mess is where risk builds up.
KeeperDB pulls database access directly into the Keeper vault. No more scattered tools, shared credentials, or one-off tunnels that nobody fully tracks. Access is controlled through policies, sessions are logged, and credentials are never exposed to the user. That alone shuts down a lot of common fainlure points.
This matters because databases are not just another asset. They are the asset. Yet many teams still use their old workflows because of their need to create work visibility and control systems. The company faces its greatest danger from interior threats which include the unauthorized disclosure of employee access credentials.
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KeeperDB also brings in tighter controls like read-only access, activity tracking, and full session recording. For teams that do not want to ditch existing tools, a proxy option keeps things compatible while still enforcing centralized control.
Zoom out and this fits where the industry is heading. Zero trust is no longer just about identity. It is moving deeper into infrastructure layers like databases. Keeper is basically saying access control should not stop at login. It should continue all the way to the data itself.


