Microsoft announced today that it would change the name of its Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) enterprise identity service to Microsoft Entra ID by the end of the year.
Azure AD offers a range of security features, including single sign-on, multifactor authentication, and conditional access, with Microsoft saying it helps defend against 99.9 percent of cybersecurity attacks.
While the standalone license names are also being modified with this rebrand, it will not affect the service's capabilities, and everything will work just as before the name change.
"Capabilities and licensing plans, sign-in URLs and APIs remain unchanged, and all existing deployments, configurations and integrations will continue to work as before," said Joy Chik, Microsoft President for Identity & Network Access.
"Starting today, you'll see notifications in the administrator portal, on our websites, in documentation, and in other places where you may interact with Azure AD."
The transition from Azure AD to Microsoft Entra ID will be finalized by the end of 2023, requiring no customer action.
Today, Microsoft also announced the launch of two new services, Entra Internet Access and Entra Private Access, in public preview, designed to provide secure access to corporate resources.
Entra Internet Access is used to secure public-facing web services, allowing admins to restrict visitors through Conditional Access.
"Microsoft Entra Internet Access is an identity centric Secure Web Gateway that protects access to all internet, SaaS, and Microsoft 365 apps and resources," Chik said.
Entra Private Access is VPN-like service that allows remote access to internal, private corporate resources.
"Microsoft Entra Private Access is an identity centric Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) that secures access to private apps and resources," Chik said.
You can sign-up for a preview of Entra Internet Access and Entra Private Access's upcoming capabilities today before their release scheduled for later this year.
"We’re committed to building a more secure world for all and making life harder for threat actors, easier for admins, and more secure for every user," Chik said.
"As part of that commitment, we’ll keep expanding Microsoft Entra to provide the broadest possible coverage along with a flexible and agile model where people, organizations, apps, and even smart things can confidently make real-time access decisions."
Comments
DIMMReaper_ - 10 months ago
<p>I've seen MS rebrand some stupid bleep ... but this takes the cake...</p>
tpmeredith - 10 months ago
I agree this is really really dumb. MS must have a team in their marketing department that just renames products to worse names for no reason at all every year. Ugh.
samw5 - 10 months ago
Seriously... and in typical MS fashion half of the stuff will be named one way and the other another way.... #MSmarketingFAILboat
buzzword - 10 months ago
If there's one thing Microsoft excels at it's random needless product name changes that do *nothing* except cause confusion in the marketplace.
Dominique1 - 10 months ago
Looking forward to the day Microsoft rename Word and Excel. LOL!!
AutomaticJack - 10 months ago
Tbf this was expected, as its been known for a while that they wanted to distance this product from windowsAD -they said azureAD isn't an AD product.
If only they could have picked a more suitable name. Not surprised they picked a random name as it goes along with all the rest of the randomness they do. "Welcome to the cloud!" lol.
kuhrolan - 9 months ago
For those saying the rebranding is random, I don't have access to why the name was chosen, but 'Entra' can mean 'Enter' in Portuguese. It doesn't seem accidental.