For organizations, protecting computer networks has always been a very tough and demanding task. In the current technological era digital resources can now be protected without the need for outdated traditional perimeter-based security techniques. Organizations can use the Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) approach to safeguard and filter their vital digital assets for the company's benefit. This platform uses sophisticated logical authentication to test the system's ability to authenticate users, and network monitoring is used to look for possible security flaws and system vulnerabilities. By evaluating users' interactions with the system and their handling of assigned digital resources, multi-factor authentication filters out unwanted access attempts. Three fundamental access control styles are provided by network segmentation, giving administrators the option to manage access in a democratic, strict, or flexible manner (least privilege approach).
Ansar et al. (Fri,) studied this question.