The Credential Nobody Owned
Full disclosure: We built ExpiryPulse, so we obviously have a perspective on this problem. But this article isn't a pitch, it's a collection of real incidents, real data, and real takeaways that ap...

Source: DEV Community
Full disclosure: We built ExpiryPulse, so we obviously have a perspective on this problem. But this article isn't a pitch, it's a collection of real incidents, real data, and real takeaways that apply whether you use our tool, someone else's, or a well-maintained spreadsheet. We just think the problem is worth talking about honestly. It always starts the same way Someone gets paged at 2 AM. A site is down, an API is throwing 500s, or a payment flow just stopped working. The team scrambles. Thirty minutes of checking logs, restarting services, and ruling out deployment issues. Then someone finally asks: when does the cert expire? The answer: yesterday. It's a story that repeats across the industry — not because teams are careless, but because credentials are uniquely easy to lose track of. They're set up once, they work silently for months, and the only reminder they exist is the moment they stop working. This isn't a small-team problem What makes certificate and credential expiry so in