Data protection in IAM Identity Center - AWS IAM Identity Center

Data protection in IAM Identity Center

The AWS shared responsibility model applies to data protection in AWS IAM Identity Center. As described in this model, AWS is responsible for protecting the global infrastructure that runs all of the AWS cloud. You are responsible for maintaining control over your content that is hosted on this infrastructure. You are also responsible for the security configuration and management tasks for the AWS services that you use. For more information about data privacy, see the Data Privacy FAQ. For information about data protection in Europe, see the AWS Shared Responsibility Model and GDPR blog post on the AWS Security Blog.

We recommend that you secure your data in the following ways:

  • Use multi-factor authentication (MFA) with IAM Identity Center.

  • Use TLS to communicate with AWS resources. We require TLS 1.2 and recommend TLS 1.3.

  • Set up API and user activity logging with AWS CloudTrail. For information about using CloudTrail trails to capture AWS activities, see Working with CloudTrail trails in the AWS CloudTrail User Guide.

  • Use AWS encryption solutions, along with all default security controls within AWS services.

We strongly recommend that you never put confidential or sensitive information, such as your customers’ email addresses, into tags or free-form text fields such as a Name field. This includes when you work with AWS IAM Identity Center, or other AWS services using the console, API, AWS CLI, or AWS SDKs. Any data that you enter into tags or free-form text fields used for names may be used for diagnostic logs.

Encryption in transit

IAM Identity Center protects data in transit, as it travels to and from the service, by automatically encrypting all inter-network data using the Transport Layer Security (TLS) 1.2 or TLS 1.3 encryption protocol. Direct HTTPS requests sent to the IAM Identity Center APIs, other than OIDC and SCIM APIs, are signed by using the AWS Signature Version 4 Algorithm to establish a secure connection.

Data privacy

With IAM Identity Center, you retain control of your organization’s data. Your user and group identities stored in IAM Identity Center are shared with other AWS services such as AWS managed applications only if you enable them with IAM Identity Center, and if needed by those services.

For additional information, see the AWS Data Privacy FAQ.

Data retention

IAM Identity Center stores your data such as user and group identities, and metadata, until you delete them from the service. When you delete an IAM Identity Center instance, the data it contains is also deleted.