A while back we wrote about protecting your data in the cloud era under a simple banner: trust no one. That advice has only gotten more important – because the old way of doing security has quietly stopped working, and most businesses haven’t noticed.
For decades, business security worked like a castle. You built a strong wall – a firewall, an office network – and once someone was inside the walls, they were trusted to roam. That made sense when your people, your computers, and your data all lived in one building.
Your business doesn’t live in a building anymore. Your email and files are in the cloud. Your people work from home, from the road, and from personal phones. The “wall” now has so many doors that guarding the perimeter has become almost meaningless. And attackers know the easiest way in isn’t to smash the wall – it’s to steal a key. A stolen password lets them stroll through the front door looking exactly like one of your employees.
The modern approach flips the old assumption on its head. Instead of trusting anyone who’s “inside,” you verify every time. Every login, every device, every request gets a quiet check: Is this really you? Is this a device we recognize and trust? Should you have access to this in the first place? Nothing is trusted automatically – hence, trust no one.
For a real business, that means a handful of practical things:
The payoff is peace of mind that scales with how you actually work. A stolen password becomes far less useful to a criminal. A lost laptop is an inconvenience, not a catastrophe. And you can let your team work flexibly without leaving every door propped open.
We’ve moved businesses across Santa Cruz and the Bay Area off the old castle model and onto something built for how work happens today. Ready to see what it would take for yours?