Zero Trust

In 2010, a cybersecurity industry analyst had an epiphany: increasing sophistication of network security models through the 2000s contributed to a corresponding increasing false sense of security among cybersecurity practitioners. He used his pulpit to appeal for “Zero Trust.” Various solutions in the industry press such as “de-perimeterization” and “data-centric security” existed but were not as intuitive to grasp as the phrase “Zero Trust.” Zero Trust developments have since been fueled by the simple observation that fortifying networks alone does not protect data. Vendors, standards bodies, and regulators started to study this problem and independently came to the same conclusion. What began over a decade ago as a conceptual model is now is a widely accepted methodology for minimizing uncertainty in enforcing least privilege access to systems resources.
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