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Zero trust planning: Key factors for IT pros to consider

Analysis
Nov 30, 20203 mins
Access ControlNetworkingSecurity

Rolling out effective zero-trust network access calls for coordinating IT and security teams, data discovery, network segmentation.

An anonymous hooded laptop user is surrounded by binary code and graphed data. [security threat]
Credit: Peshkov / Getty Images

Moving away from VPNs as a means to protect corporate networks at the perimeter and moving toward zero-trust network access requires careful enterprise planning and may require implementing technologies that are new to individual organizations.

ZTNA employs identity-based authentication to establish trust with entities trying to access the network and grants each authorized entity access only to the data and applications they require to accomplish their tasks. It also provides new tools for IT to control access to sensitive data by those entities that are deemed trusted.

It can take many different forms—software, hardware and as a service—and can be provided by a large number of networking and security vendors.

Zero trust and SASE

ZTNA is compatible with the broader secure access service edge (SASE) architecture for the convergence of security and network features into a unified cloud service.  SASE is in line with ZTNA assumptions that any user, device or application could be compromised, so ZTNA can be thought of as technology to help migrate towards a SASE architecture. But implementing ZTNA is not a simple task.

Rolling out ZTNA

Adopting it requires significant, coordinated work by enterprise IT and security teams, which is always a potential source of delay, so teams should focus on their business goals, streamlining access while securing sensitive data and maintaining compliance.

The first steps are to discover what data needs to be protected and to identify current access and data flows across the network. This is necessary to reveal possible weaknesses in security and to create policies that defend against them.

One method to limit damage caused by successful breaches is network segmentation, which limits the resources that each authorized entity has access to. That way if a breach is successful, the attacker has access only to the network segment that has been compromised.

This implements one of ZTNA’s basic principles: enforcing least privilege, which grants users access to only the applications and data that they require.

ZTNA authorizes access based on identity (who you are) rather than your location.  It minimizes risk by applying granular access polices to data via a dynamic policy engine that assesses multiple factors including device, location, network, behavior, and the data being requested in order to confirm an authentic identity or to request reauthentication.   For example, ZTNA may deny access to a user requesting sensitive data from an unfamiliar location, in the middle of the night from an unknown device.

As part of ZTNA, enterprises need to monitor access so they can better enforce their specific access policies. And they should also implement automation and orchestration to reduce complex, time-consuming manual changes that would otherwise be needed to create and enforce policies.

Benefits

ZTNA is compelling in the current distributed environment of cloud-applications, remote users with BYOD and a multitude of IoT devices.  

It is based on an architecture that virtualizes software and hardware layers and establishes segmentation that isolates critical data. Further, it provides a consistent method for authenticating and authorizing access to both private and public clouds, including SaaS applications.

Its centralized management provides IT and security teams the flexibility to custom design appropriate access for users given time of day, device type and location. And ZTNA can unify the IT and OT security divide by providing secure access for IoT devices, which can be numerous.

lee doyle

Lee Doyle is principal analyst at Doyle Research, providing client-focused targeted analysis on the evolution of intelligent networks. He has over 25 years’ experience analyzing the IT, network, and telecom markets. Lee has written extensively on such topics as SDN, SD-WAN, NFV, enterprise adoption of networking technologies, and IT-Telecom convergence. Before founding Doyle Research, Lee was group vice president for network, telecom, and security research at IDC. Lee holds a B.A. in economics from Williams College.

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