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The Critical Risk Accounts Quick View slider shows the following details:
- Number of accounts at that risk level. In the example it is 36.
- Top Risk Factor, the highest weighted factor contributing to the overall risk for the specific number of accounts. Might not be listed individually. In the example it’s Breached Accounts.
- Top Risk Platform, the platform from which most of the accounts were discovered that are contributing to the overall risk score. In the example it’s Azure.
- Number of Service Accounts in that specific number of accounts at that risk level. In the example it’s 4 out of 36.
- Top 5 Critical Accounts: The 5 accounts that should be looked at and managed first. Various accounts on different platforms that either haven’t had a password change in over 180 days, no owner, or were found with a z-score deviation match.
- Top 5 Risk Factors: The risk factors that contribute most to the overall risk score of the organization. These areas should be used to tighten cyber security policies to appropriately manage risks caused by missing policy enforcement. In the example they are listed as Breached Accounts, Account Password Not Changed Since Public Breach, Accounts with Password Never Set, Accounts with MFA Not Enabled, and Accounts with Password older than 90 days.
