Understanding Access Types

Learn about the three access categories Ploy uses to classify users in your applications.

Written By Harry Lucas

Last updated 27 days ago


Overview

When viewing users in an application, Ploy categorises them into three access types: Active, Removed, and Shadow. This helps you focus on the accounts that matter most while still maintaining visibility into discovered access.


Active Access

Users with active access are in your configured source of truth for that application. These are the accounts you care about β€” the ones you'll see in access reviews, manage through workflows, and include in offboarding.

If you signed into the application directly (e.g. zapier.com) and viewed the users list, these are the people you'd expect to see.


Removed Access

Users who have recently been removed or suspended from the application. This includes:

  • Accounts that have been deprovisioned

  • Suspended accounts (where the user could potentially regain access automatically)


Shadow Access

Users Ploy has detected with access to the application, but who are not in any configured source of truth. This typically includes:

  • Personal accounts employees created independently

  • Access discovered via email scanning or browser extension that hasn't been verified

  • Legacy accounts from before you configured a source of truth

Shadow access gives you visibility without cluttering your primary user list. You can investigate these accounts and decide whether to formalise or remove them.


How Access Type is Determined

Access type depends entirely on your source of truth configuration:

Scenario

Result

User is in a configured source of truth

Active Access

User was previously active but has been removed/suspended

Removed Access

User detected but not in any source of truth

Shadow Access

No source of truth configured

All users show as Shadow Access

To move users from Shadow to Active, you'll need to either add them to an existing source of truth (e.g. add them to the IdP group) or configure a source of truth that includes them.