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Business Management Review | Wednesday, June 22, 2022
The transition to a Zero Trust model needs a measured strategy that uses proper technology, emphasizes data security, and analyzes the business's primary goals.
Every day, enterprises must respond to many new cybersecurity threats and vulnerabilities. Zero Trust Networks (ZTN) are more suited than conventional perimeter-based networks to address these issues in several situations.
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Additionally, as firms pursue more comprehensive digital transformation activities, Zero Trust concepts become vital to the company strategy. Therefore, recognizing these Zero Trust concepts and putting them into practice is essential for securing company data in the digital age.
Why Use Zero Trust?
Organizations must adopt a stricter approach to boosting the security of data and systems as technology improves and security and privacy standards are created and implemented (especially when workplace practices around people working shifts due to the COVID-19 pandemic remotely).
Best Practices for A Zero Trust Implementation
The fundamental principles serve as the foundation for a successful Zero Trust deployment. In addition, these ideas help develop a robust ZTN framework and help the process become more sustainable and efficient in managing security at a company.
Understand the Protection Surface
Regulatory privacy standards and guidelines are growing, making it critical for businesses to identify and secure their valuable and sensitive data. However, ZTN and privacy rules and guidelines have one thing in common: the organization's data.
Outlining the security surface needs explicitly recognizing and documenting the data types crucial to an organization and understanding its location.
Map the Connections
A standard network architecture diagram that portrays network traffic flow is insufficient. An entire map of the numerous links across the network is also necessary for ZTN to succeed.
Zero Trust requires a detailed mapping of all programs in use, related data sets, and data transmission connections, with enough detail to decide where security controls are necessary.
Consistently Monitor Traffic and Sustain
All resources will be better protected if the logs are funneled to a focused location and monitored for illegal activity. Deep packet inspection tools and different network security monitoring technology can support it. Additionally, automation and orchestration can properly monitor and filter undesirable traffic.
Zero Trust is a never-ending process; evaluating all logs and making progress in obtaining more visibility into all resources should be made regularly.
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