• Anew paper from Mutually Agreed Norms for Routing Security (MANRS)makes a straightforward argument: Internet routing is a critical but under-managed dependency in the enterprise digital supply chain • For organizations that rely on cloud platforms, Content Delivery Networks (CDNs), and Software-Defined Wide Area Networks (SD-WANs), routing security failures are business risks with operational, financial, and reputational consequences • Rather than rehashing known protocol weaknesses, the paper examines Internet routing as a governance and procurement issue for enterprises • Its core message is that demand-side pressure, not just operator goodwill, is essential for routing security to improve at scale • Most enterprise security models focus inward by hardening endpoints, securing applications, encrypting data, and managing identity • The paper argues that this perspective misses a layer - the global Internet routing system that determines how traffic reaches those assets

Article Summaries:

  • A new paper from Mutually Agreed Norms for Routing Security (MANRS) makes a straightforward argument: Internet routing is a critical but under-managed dependency in the enterprise digital supply chain. For organizations that rely on cloud platforms, Content Delivery Networks (CDNs), and Software-Defined Wide Area Networks (SD-WANs), routing security failures are business risks with operational, financial, and reputational consequences. Rather than rehashing known protocol weaknesses, the paper examines Internet routing as a governance and procurement issue for enterprises. Its core message is

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