June 13, 2022
Put simply, the term ‘zero trust’ refers to a new approach to security that relies on continuously verifying the trustworthiness of every device, user, and application in an enterprise.
It’s not, however, a set of specific tools or a type of security technology. It is a cybersecurity strategy—a mindset that serves as the foundation of modern security. At the core of a Zero Trust approach is the idea that implicit trust in any single component of a complex, interconnected system can create significant security risks. Instead, trust needs to be established via multiple mechanisms and continuously verified.
3 core principles to the Zero Trust model
Many organizations are adjusting their business models. They’re offering customers new digital experiences they need and want while also enabling a global and disparate workforce.
Applications, users, and devices need fast and secure access to data, so much that an entire industry of security tools and architectures has been built to protect it. Zero trust addresses the security needs of this data-driven hybrid cloud environment. It provides organizations with adaptive and continuous protection for users, data and assets, plus the ability to manage threats proactively. However, it also produces several corollary benefits, such as:
There can be multiple approaches to the model but there are a few considerations almost everyone will need to include in order to implement an efficient Zero Trust architecture:
Next Generation Firewall – you will need a tool that provides network protection, decrypts traffic, and can assist with micro-segmentation.
Zero Trust Network Access – new Zero Trust cloud services can give remote workers access to internal private apps without the complexities, bottlenecks, and risks of VPNs.
Dara Loss Prevention – DLP solutions enable you to go beyond merely controlling access to managing how your data is used.
Continues monitoring – to always verify, you need to keep vigilant watch over what people and entities are doing with your systems and data.
More and more organizations are beginning to adopt and implement the Zero Trust model in attempt to better protect their data. With the increase of ransomware demands and the catastrophic damage a data breach can inflict upon an organization, eliminating trust all together is becoming the new norm.