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Why Choose Zero Trust Cloud Security?

Organizations have come to rely on the cloud for many of their computing workloads. This trend has been accelerated by the urgent prioritization of security, the redefined needs of the hybrid and distributed workforce, and a surge in data analytics, machine learning (ML), and artificial intelligence (AI) that benefit from the cloud’s uninterrupted access to software, data, and other resources, anywhere, at any time. The cloud also connects organizations, networks, and users to edge computing devices and systems. These trends yield a vastly expanded, diverse range of users, devices, and applica

Zero Trust Cloud Security - Intel
What Is Zero Trust Security?

Zero trust is a comprehensive security strategy that is designed to protect all hardware, software, data, and users on an organization’s network and in the cloud. A zero trust approach to security differs from the more traditional perimeter defense strategy. In a perimeter defense, the organization protects the boundaries of its private network with firewalls and multilayered software security solutions to regulate and filter traffic to and from the public network. Once a user or device has been verified and admitted to the private network, it is typically treated as a trusted resource. By con

Zero Trust Cloud Security - Intel
Why Zero Trust?

Zero trust is a security strategy that supports continuous protection against intrusions and malicious code. Cloud-based operations demand a zero trust approach because a defensive perimeter cannot be established. A zero trust strategy should provide multifaceted, layered protections to support defense in depth. Intel® platforms offer hardware-based security capabilities that can strengthen zero trust policies and protections.

Zero Trust Cloud Security - Intel

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r/kubernetes · u/xmull1gan · 4w ago

Securing CI/CD for an open source project: lessons from Cilium

A lot of “software supply chain security” discussions stay pretty abstract, this is Cilium's take on how we secure our Github Actions in the OSS project. A few highlights: SHA pinning every GitHub Action Separating trust…

r/netsec · u/xmull1gan · 4w ago

Securing CI/CD for an open source project: lessons from Cilium

As a maintainer, this is Cilium's take on how we secure our Github Actions in the OSS project. A few highlights: SHA pinning every GitHub Action Separating trusted vs untrusted code paths in pull_request_target Isolating…

r/sysadmin · u/Lol_Panda2004 · 3w ago

fastest way to kill an enterprise SaaS deal: make IT feel nervous during auth review

i sit in on procurement/security reviews for a mid-sized company and honestly a shocking number of SaaS products lose trust in the first 10 minutes. usually it’s stuff like: “SSO is only on enterprise” MFA = SMS only no …

r/Proxmox · u/w453y · 1w ago

My homelab is getting spicy

TL;DR: IncusOS enforces security by default, Proxmox trusts you to configure it yourself. Immutable host, atomic updates, zero OS maintenance. Lacks PBS and a mature UI. Not a Proxmox replacement yet but worth watching. …

Hacker News · u/lmushro · 3w ago

Show HN: Vibe – Responsible AI Review for Cq (Stack Overflow for Agents)

Six weeks ago, Daniel Nissani at Mozilla.ai shared cq (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47491466), Stack Overflow for agents. One of the top concerns in that thread was security and trust around shared knowledge.So w…

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