Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Why the Evolution of Zero Trust Must Begin with Data Protection

The need for “Zero Trust” today is no longer the same as what we talked about years ago when the term was first coined. Back then, businesses only had a handful of remote workers signing in to the corporate network. The common wisdom of the day dictated that you couldn’t implicitly trust the authentication of those remote users any longer because they weren’t on the company LAN and the common solution was installing two-factor authentication.

How to Secure Hybrid Teams Against Insider Threats

As businesses emerge from the pandemic, many are making strategic decisions about their long-term work arrangements. While there is a substantial debate about remaining remote or bringing people back to the office, many companies are choosing to meet in the middle, embracing a hybrid work arrangement that allows people to work both on-site and remotely.

Why the New Executive Order will result in wider rollout of Zero Trust Adoption

The zero trust model exists because of the volume and diversity of cyberthreats on the global landscape. Zero trust is a set of coordinated system management practices plus design principles for modern IT systems. The Biden administration’s executive order on Improving the Nation’s Cybersecurity names zero trust as an essential component in hardening federal agencies against internal and external threats to national security.