National Post

GROWING CYBER THREATS PROMPT ORGANIZATI­ONS TO ADOPT ZERO TRUST SECURITY STRATEGIES

- Randi Druzin

Convention­al security models operate on the assumption that everything inside an organizati­on’s network can be trusted and that security threats come from outside, but that’s no longer true. Attackers have become sophistica­ted enough to infiltrate networks. Today, 80 percent of data breaches are caused by the misuse of privileged credential­s by insiders.

Organizati­ons have responded. To reduce security risk across their networks, endpoints, and clouds, they’ve adopted security practices that remove the assumption of trust altogether. This Zero Trust strategy ensures that every connection within an organizati­on is challenged and authentica­ted.

Zero Trust strategy starts with a culture shift

As the first step in building a Zero Trust strategy, businesses must change workplace culture so that every employee recognizes the need to fix bad habits that create risk.

“All employees must feel that they have a vested interest in improving security,” says Rob Lunney, Country Manager of Canada at Palo Alto Networks, a cybersecur­ity company based in California.

Lunney believes this can only happen if relationsh­ips are strong within the company.

“You can’t lead and change culture by instilling fear. You can’t create a cybersecur­ity culture frombehind a desk. You need to be out there building relationsh­ips.,” he says.

Beyond that, the company should build a network architectu­re that controls access to critical assets — with access that should be granted only on a “need-to-know” basis — and also inspects traffic for malicious content and unauthoriz­ed activity at every layer of operations.

This Zero Trust strategy, based on the principle of “never trust, always verify,” secures data and assets without disrupting operations. In fact, it simplifies operations, compliance, and auditing by automating policy management and enforcing policies across networks, endpoints, and clouds.

Companies must rethink their approach to security

Palo Alto net works serves more than 65,000 companies, including 85 on the Fortune 100 list, in more than 150 countries. As a leader in the cybersecur­ity industry, the company is perfectly positioned to implement Zero Trust security strategies for its various customers.

This approach is especially important now that more employees are using their own computers and phones forwork purposes, and more companies

This Zero Trust strategy, based on the principle of “never trust, always verify,” secures data and assets without disrupting operations.

are moving their software and services from servers to the cloud.

Palo Alto Networks is providing these companies with security that is both robust and simple, so they can meet their business requiremen­ts. Lunney has a simple message for leaders of those organizati­ons and others. “Given the growing cyber threat today,” he says, “you need to rethink your approach to security to protect the data that’s most critical to your business.”

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 ??  ?? Rob Lunney Country Manager of Canada, Palo Alto Networks
Rob Lunney Country Manager of Canada, Palo Alto Networks

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