Veza Inc., a startup that helps enterprises regulate employee access to business applications, has raised $108 million from investors to enhance its technology. It provides a platform that can automatically scan a company’s applications to determine which user has access to what resources. Veza visualizes this information in a graph that helps administrators spot misconfigured access permissions. Using Veza, administrators could find accounts that have permission to change database settings but don’t belong to cybersecurity staff. The platform includes a search bar that makes it possible to browse user accounts with natural language prompts. In a large organization, access permissions are regularly added and removed. Administrators can configure Veza to generate an alert if an account receives access to a system in breach of internal rules. The platform likewise spots accounts that have correct access permissions, but aren’t actively used and therefore represent an unnecessary cybersecurity risk. Companies create accounts for not only employees but also applications. A revenue forecasting tool, for example, might require an account in a sales database to access the transaction logs it holds. Administrators can use Veza to find such accounts in the corporate network and remove them when they’re no longer needed.