Oracle (ORCL) Separates Network Security from Network Architecture
Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) today announced the availability of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Zero Trust Packet Routing which is built into the network fabric of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI). This helps to curtail any unauthorized access to data by separating network security from the underlying architecture. Based on the 2023 initiative to develop a new open standard with Applied Invention and other organizations, OCI Zero Trust Packet Routing enables organizations to set security attributes on resources and write natural language policies that limit network traffic based on the resources and data services accessed. As a result, organizations can safeguard themselves from one of the most common causes of compromise—network misconfigurations. OCI is the first cloud provider to implement Zero Trust Packet Routing (ZPR) into its platform.
"As public clouds emerged, enterprises had the opportunity to redefine how they address network security," said
"Traditional security tools try to protect sensitive data by blocking access, but history shows it is almost impossible to anticipate all the ways a hacker might attempt to infiltrate a network," said
The new ZPR standard was needed as an organization's network architecture changes each time an application is launched, a new instance is scaled up, or additional database servers are added. Using a traditional network architecture-based security approach is time-consuming due to the sheer complexity of securing and auditing the configuration points. In addition, responsibility is transferred to network teams to implement security requirements, which can result in human error.
OCI Zero Trust Packet Routing helps address these challenges by separating network security from network architecture and enabling organizations to write security policies to enforce security intent at the network layer. This means traffic not explicitly allowed by policy will be restricted at the network level. As a result, organizations can:
- Improve security posture: Security teams can restrict access to sensitive data to a specific path, such as request origination host, network segment, or target data service. This helps reduce the attack surface area and safeguard against data exfiltration based on compromised credentials alone.
- Streamline compliance: Security teams can quickly and easily prove to auditors that the necessary security controls are in place to meet compliance requirements by limiting access to a single, authorized path with natural language policies.
- Simplify security management: Security teams can restrict access to sensitive data based on security attributes. Once a security attribute is set on data, security controls are automatically enforced based on the policies in place. This minimizes the need to deploy network-layer security rules based on characteristics such as IP addresses and ports.
"Though cloud network security has evolved over the last two decades, organizations are still increasingly vulnerable to unauthorized access and exfiltration of sensitive data due to security controls heavily reliant on user credentials," said
