

The admin tries to sign in. Then tries again. Then asks whether anyone else is seeing the same error. Within minutes, multiple privileged users are locked out, the helpdesk queue is waking up, and someone asks the question that should have been settled long ago: "Do we still have emergency access?"
No one answers quickly, which is usually the answer.
HR-Z0 case note: when access breaks twice, identity is unmanaged infrastructure.
Lockout incidents are ugly because they convert identity weakness directly into downtime:
The symptoms are always recognizable:
The event is disruptive. The realization underneath it is worse: the business may not actually know how to recover control of its own environment under identity failure.
The cost is not abstract.
The lockout or over-permission event is the symptom. Exception culture is the disease.
Organizations often assume emergency access exists without maintaining it as a living control.
If too many administrative actions depend on the same fragile identity path, one issue can block the whole response.
Even when emergency options exist, teams may not know where they are, who owns them, or how to use them safely.
Even when emergency options exist, teams may not know where they are, who owns them, or how to use them safely.
The fix is not a security memo. The fix is enforced baseline behavior that survives turnover.
NorthStar identifies which accounts, roles, and recovery paths the business depends on when normal access fails.
Oort improves:
This does not make lockouts pleasant. It makes them survivable.
We automate access reviews, exception expiry, backup/restore verification, and sharing enforcement so security does not depend on heroic memory.

Comms Officer HR-Z0 (a.k.a. “H.R. Zero”) is Galaxie’s deadpan broadcast voice for the Office Horror Stories series — part dispatcher, part incident historian, part morale damage control.
Built from equal parts helpdesk transcripts, post-mortems, and calendar trauma, HR-Z0 doesn’t “tell stories.” It files reports from the front lines of messy operations — where ownership evaporates, folders time-travel, and a “quick change” becomes a six-month saga.