/Courtesy of SoftCamp

SoftCamp held a media day at its Gwacheon headquarters on the 18th, where it discussed security enhancement strategies through the 'security control' area of SaaS based on Zero Trust Guidelines 2.0.

Corporations are increasingly using SaaS services such as ChatGPT and Microsoft 365 for Copilot to improve productivity and work efficiency. As sensitive data containing important corporate information moves to SaaS services, security threats are being posed in the cloud. Therefore, the Zero Trust principle, which requires trusting nothing and verifying all access, is necessary in the SaaS environment.

On the 3rd, the Ministry of Science and ICT and the Korea Internet & Security Agency (KISA) announced Zero Trust Guidelines 2.0 to help domestic corporations adopt security models. Version 2.0 provides detailed instructions for corporations and institutions to effectively build and operate a Zero Trust model based on the fundamental principles of Version 1.0. It includes a maturity model with four stages, practical implementation procedures, and operational measures that contain a detailed checklist, evaluation indicators, considerations by stage, and real-world examples.

SoftCamp will explore the functions and security capabilities of core elements required by the Zero Trust Guidelines 2.0, as well as examine the logical components of Zero Trust architecture. Furthermore, it will present its security technologies and solutions that can enhance the detailed security capabilities of each element.

These include 'integrated account management in cloud environments' that continuously verifies user access to enhance account security, 'secure remote access' using Remote Browser Isolation (RBI) technology, and 'document security orchestration' that prevents file control and data leakage through encryption required in the SaaS environment. SoftCamp considers this as a security control area for SaaS usage and proposes methodologies that ensure safe account management, access isolation, file control, and DRM compatibility within the security control domain.

Based on the Zero Trust Guidelines 2.0, the intention is to fulfill its role as an optimal security corporation for diagnosing the current state of corporate security, establishing implementation strategies, and strengthening detailed capabilities.

Bae Hwan-guk, the CEO of SoftCamp, said, 'SoftCamp will respond to changing security demands with differentiated technology, supporting corporations and organizations in managing data and user access safely,' and noted, 'We will do our best to eliminate security blind spots that may occur in the SaaS environment.'