If you’re a cybersecurity practitioner, chances are good that you’ve heard the term “zero trust” over the past few months. If you attend trade shows, keep current with the trade media headlines, or network with peers and other security pros, you’ve probably at least heard the term. Counterintuitively, this large-scale attention from the industry at large can make understanding the concept — and potentially adapting it for your security program — more difficult than otherwise would be the case.
Day by Day it becomes very difficult to trust any security program news like leaks of data by big Giants is still in news and therefore the trust level is going down for this security program as no one come clean.
Realistic ‘Zero Trust’ for Your Cybersecurity Program
Posted by: Ed Moyle May 29, 2018 08:49 AMIf you’re a cybersecurity practitioner, chances are good that you’ve heard the term “zero trust” over the past few months. If you attend trade shows, keep current with the trade media headlines, or network with peers and other security pros, you’ve probably at least heard the term. Counterintuitively, this large-scale attention from the industry at large can make understanding the concept — and potentially adapting it for your security program — more difficult than otherwise would be the case.