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Diving into Secure Access Service Edge

You're reading from   Diving into Secure Access Service Edge A technical leadership guide to achieving success with SASE at market speed

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803242170
Length 192 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jeremiah Ginn Jeremiah Ginn
Author Profile Icon Jeremiah Ginn
Jeremiah Ginn
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Table of Contents (28) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – SASE Market Perspective
2. Chapter 1: SASE Introduction FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: SASE Human 4. Chapter 3: SASE Managed 5. Chapter 4: SASE Orchestration 6. Chapter 5: SASE SD-WAN 7. Part 2 – SASE Technical Perspective
8. Chapter 6: SASE Detail 9. Chapter 7: SASE Session 10. Chapter 8: SASE Policy 11. Chapter 9: SASE Identity 12. Chapter 10: SASE Security 13. Chapter 11: SASE Services 14. Chapter 12: SASE Management 15. Part 3 – SASE Success Perspective
16. Chapter 13: SASE Stakeholders 17. Chapter 14: SASE Case 18. Chapter 15: SASE Design 19. Chapter 16: SASE Trust 20. Part 4 – SASE Bonus Perspective
21. Chapter 17: SASE Learn 22. Chapter 18: SASE DevOps 23. Chapter 19: SASE Forward 24. Chapter 20: SASE Bonus 25. Index 26. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: SASE Terms

Service Roles

Each SASE service component may perform one or more separate roles in the SASE service. In one case, the IAM service may serve as the authentication role, while in another, it may serve as the target actor to validate an access request. Each role that's performed must be validated when it's initiated. For example, in real estate transactions, an agent may be a buyer, seller, buyer agent, seller agent, third-party consultant, owner, lender, trustee, mentor, and so on. At the same time, the same real estate agent may be a combination of several roles. This is conceptually like the components in a SASE service as they can play multiple roles, with each role being governed by a separate policy.

A role, subject to change, affects access according to the policy that's being enforced. In one role, a user or system may have full access but have no access in a similar role. For instance, the automated maintenance request system on an office copier machine may...

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