Session Management

Hubrix gives you full visibility into which devices are currently signed in to your account, and lets you revoke access from any of them at any time.

The Active Sessions panel showing three devices with location, browser, and last-active information
The Active Sessions panel showing three devices with location, browser, and last-active information

Viewing active sessions

Go to Settings → Security → Active sessions.

You see a list of every device currently signed in to your account. Each entry shows:

  • Device type — Desktop, Mobile, or Tablet
  • Browser — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, etc.
  • Location — approximate city and country based on the sign-in IP address
  • Last active — when this session was last used

Your current session is marked with a "This device" badge.

Revoking a session

To sign out a specific device:

  1. Find the session in the list.
  2. Click Revoke next to it.
  3. That device is signed out immediately. The next time someone tries to use Hubrix on that device, they will see the sign-in screen.

To sign out all other devices at once, click Revoke all other sessions at the top of the list. Your current session is not affected.

Revoking a session does not delete any work done during that session. Agents, workflows, and other content created from that session are preserved.

When to revoke sessions

  • You lost a device — revoke the session for that device immediately to prevent unauthorised access.
  • You notice an unfamiliar session — if you see a session in a location you don't recognise, revoke it and change your password.
  • You're done using a shared or public computer — always revoke the session after using Hubrix on a device that is not yours.

Recent sign-ins

Below the active sessions list, the Recent sign-ins table shows the last 10 sign-in events for your account:

ColumnDescription
Date and timeWhen the sign-in occurred
IP addressThe IP address used to sign in
LocationApproximate location from the IP
MethodPassword, Google SSO, or Microsoft SSO
StatusSuccessful or Failed

If you see a failed sign-in attempt you don't recognise, your email address may be known to an attacker. Enable MFA if you haven't already, and consider changing your password.

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