Intermediate

Zero Trust: Network Security

Secure remote access is the capability that allows users to connect to network resources safely from remote locations. It has become critical as remote work and telecommuting have become...

Network segmentation is the practice of dividing a large, flat network into smaller, more manageable segments so that fine-grained access controls can be applied to each one. This is a foundational technique for Zero Trust network security, because it directly limits how far an attacker can move once they gain a foothold anywhere in the environment.

Micro-segmentation is a more granular technique within the Zero Trust framework. While traditional segmentation divides a network into large, broad segments (often mapped to departments or physical areas), micro-segmentation creates much smaller, more specific segments defined by detailed policy — down to the level of individual users, applications, or workloads.

Micro-segmentation is central to enforcing the Zero Trust principle of "never trust, always verify": every request to access a network resource must be authenticated and authorized regardless of where it originates, and micro-segmentation ensures that even users within the same broad network segment have access strictly limited to only what is necessary for their role.

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What's inside

5 sections
  1. 1 Table of Contents
  2. 2 Module 1: Network Segmentation and Micro-Segmentation
  3. 3 Module 2: Secure Remote Access Technologies
  4. 4 Module 3: Continuous Monitoring and Analytics
  5. 5 Summary

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