Updated on 2025-11-06 GMT+08:00

My Account

IAM provides system-defined identity policies to define common actions supported by cloud services. You can also create custom identity policies using the actions supported by cloud services for more refined access control.

In addition to IAM, the Organizations service also provides service control policies (SCPs to set access control policies.

SCPs do not actually grant any permissions to an entity. They only set the permissions boundary for the entity. When SCPs are attached to a member account or an organizational unit (OU), they do not directly grant permissions to that member account or OU. Instead, the SCPs just determine what permissions are available for that member account or the member accounts under that OU. The granted permissions can be applied only if they are allowed by the SCPs.

To learn more about how IAM policies are different from Organizations SCPs, see What Are the Differences Between IAM Policies and Organizations SCPs?

This section describes the elements used by IAM custom identity policies and Organizations SCPs. The elements include actions, resources, and conditions.

Actions

Actions are specific operations that are allowed or denied in an identity policy.

  • The Access Level column describes how the action is classified (such as list, read, or write). This classification helps you understand the level of access that an action grants when you use it in an identity policy.
  • The Resource Type column indicates whether the action supports resource-level permissions.
    • You can use a wildcard (*) to indicate all resource types. If this column is empty (-), the action does not support resource-level permissions and you must specify all resources ("*") in your identity policy statements.
    • If this column includes a resource type, you must specify the URN in the Resource element of your statements.
    • Required resources are marked with asterisks (*) in the table. If you specify a resource in a statement using this action, then it must be of this type.
  • The Condition Key column contains keys that you can specify in the Condition element of an identity policy statement.
    • If the Resource Type column has values for an action, the condition key takes effect only for the listed resource types.
    • If the Resource Type column is empty (-) for an action, the condition key takes effect for all resources that action supports.
    • If the Condition Key column is empty (-) for an action, the action does not support any condition keys.

    For details about the condition keys defined by My Account, see Conditions.

  • The Alias column lists the policy actions that are configured in identity policies. With these actions, you can use APIs for policy-based authorization. For details, see Policies and Identity Policies.

The following table lists the actions that you can define in identity policy statements for My Account.

Table 1 Actions supported by My Account

Action

Description

Access Level

Resource Type (*: required)

Condition Key

Alias

account:accountInfo:update

Update account information, including basic information and preferences.

write

-

-

-

account:cps:view

View the promotion data of Recommendations and Rebates by cloud promoters.

read

-

-

-

account:cps:update

Join the reward promotion program.

write

-

-

-

account:privilege:view

View my privileges and prizes.

read

-

-

-

Resources

My Account does not support resource-specific permission control in identity policies. If you want to allow access to My Account, use the wildcard (*) for the Resource element to apply identity policies to all resources.

Conditions

My Account does not support service-specific condition keys in identity policies. It can only use global condition keys applicable to all services. For details, see Global Condition Keys.