Top 5 reasons for a zero-trust approach to network security (original) (raw)

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As network perimeters disintegrate and enterprises adopt cloud computing, discover the top reasons organizations are opting for a zero-trust approach to network security.

Peter Loshin

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Published: 12 Apr 2019

Zero trust may seem like just another security buzzword, but organizations are increasingly finding reasons to take the zero-trust approach to network security.

In the early days of the internet, network security professionals borrowed medieval terminology to describe network defenses: Moats, bastion hosts, perimeters, firewalls and gateways all figured into the network defender's vocabulary. In those days, the baseline network infrastructure was as simple as organizations dividing hosts into two categories: internal and trusted vs. external and untrusted.

The world has moved on from this model, where internal users are considered trusted employees and everyone else who accesses resources externally is deemed untrusted. Now, users accessing resources both internally and externally can run the gamut: employees, consumers, contractors, vendors and other trusted or untrusted third parties. The prevalence of BYOD, cloud computing and remote workers also means secure network access can no longer be reliably and securely funneled through firewalls or other security gateways.

Reflecting the increasing complexity of making network security choices, the concept of zero-trust network security was first articulated by a Forrester analyst in 2009. It has gained acceptance in recent years as Google created -- and migrated to -- the BeyondCorp zero-trust security framework.

Here are the top drivers behind the move to the zero-trust approach to network security:

While there are many pressing reasons to adopt a zero-trust approach to network security, the primary reason to adopt this approach is because it works. However, just as firewalls were once considered the sine qua non of securing an internet-connected enterprise, zero trust should be viewed as a transitional state rather than an end goal for security. Defenders need to continue to be vigilant as attackers continue to develop ways to exploit or bypass security solutions.

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