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ControlPlane Launches Enterprise Support For OpenBao To Strengthen Secrets Security

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Published on March 12, 2026
Author Pam Oldfield

ControlPlane, a specialist AI Security and DevSecOps consultancy, today announced the launch of ControlPlane Enterprise for OpenBao, a new offering designed to help organizations securely adopt and operate the OpenBao secrets management platform.

Following IBM’s $6.4 billion acquisition of HashiCorp and the transition of Vault to IBM Software, organizations are seeking open source alternatives with enterprise-grade support.

ControlPlane Enterprise for OpenBao provides organizations with a secure and supported pathway to deploy OpenBao while maintaining the flexibility and cost advantages of open source software. The offering extends the core platform with enterprise-grade security hardening, supply chain assurance, rapid CVE remediation and optional FIPS 140-3 cryptographic compliance.

As organizations scale up cloud native infrastructure for AI initiatives, the number of credentials, access tokens, and machine identities used across systems has increased dramatically, making secrets management a critical control in modern cybersecurity.

For many organizations, preventing breaches now depends on keeping one step ahead of malicious actors to protect sensitive data that sits at the heart of IT environments.

Modern infrastructure runs on secrets, machine identities, and credentials that allow systems to operate securely. If those secrets are exposed or poorly managed, attackers can move rapidly through an environment

OpenBao represents an important step forward for the open source security ecosystem. With ControlPlane Enterprise for OpenBao we are driving a modern secrets management platform with our years of experience with regulated organizations: enterprise-grade security, operational assurance, and the expertise to run it at massive scale.

Andrew Martin, CEO of ControlPlane

OpenBao is open source software that enables organizations to securely store and manage sensitive information, controlling who and what can access systems and data. As cloud environments grow more complex, secrets management is now viewed as a foundational security control.

ControlPlane’s founding engineer, Alex Scheel is OpenBao’s top contributor and former Technical Steering Committee Chair, having authored Vault’s core cryptographic layer at HashiCorp and deployed it for GitLab into their native Secrets Manager, validating its enterprise readiness.

After a string of high-profile incidents last year, both across Asia Pacific and globally, the message from our customers is clear: protecting the keys to their infrastructure is fundamental to preventing a breach. That’s why we’ve packaged enterprise-grade support around the open source project, to give security and platform teams the flexibility and cost advantages of open source without taking on the full operational risk themselves.

We’ve already had significant enquiries from organizations across banking, retail, government and finance, to name a few, and that interest tells us something important: teams are looking for practical, supported ways to harden the places attackers go after first.

By combining an open source secrets manager with enterprise-grade technology, ControlPlane customers get the best of both worlds - agility and cost control, plus the confidence of vendor-backed operations. That combination is what’s driving the early momentum we’re seeing.

Aiman Alsari, Head of Asia Pacific, ControlPlane

ControlPlane’s Enterprise for OpenBao service includes secure architecture and configuration, integration with existing identity and security systems, operational runbooks, and ongoing product and implementation support from their global consultancy SMEs.


For more information visit ControlPlane Enterprise for OpenBao

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