Security news aggregator

Latest coverage for Zero Trust

Zero Trust verifies each access request and limits privileges, reducing lateral movement after compromise through segmentation and continuous authentication.

4 headlines in this view

Refine the feed

Search across headline titles and summaries.

Tag briefing

Background for this topic.

Zero trust is a security architecture that grants no implicit access based on network location. Each request is evaluated using the user or workload identity, device state, requested resource, and relevant context. Its purpose is to limit the damage from stolen credentials, compromised endpoints, or malicious insiders by enforcing least privilege and restricting lateral movement. Zero trust is a design approach, not a single product or a claim that trust can be eliminated.

Effective controls include phishing-resistant multifactor authentication, strong identity and access lifecycle management, device and workload authorization, application-level segmentation, short-lived credentials, and auditable policy decisions. Policies should limit access to specific resources and actions rather than broad network zones. Poorly maintained identities, service accounts, segmentation rules, or policy exceptions can leave exploitable paths while creating false assurance; the identity and policy infrastructure itself also requires hardening, monitoring, and recovery planning.

Showing 4 most recent headlines Filtered view
The Register 4 years, 3 months ago

Welcome to the Age of Zero Trust

Rules-based systems don't work, says Darktrace Paid Feature What's highly valuable, often sensitive, and possibly dangerous when it trickles out of your business into the wrong hands? That's right – it's your workforce. Companies are struggling to retain employees and hire new ones as workers seek new opportunities elsewhere. That causes headaches for more than just the HR department. It should be keeping IT security teams awake at night too.…