Analytics for Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs): Which Opportunities Exist for DNS Security?
Changing nature of cyberthreats and the shift from protection to avoidance
Long seen as a background utility focused on availability and performance, Domain Name System (DNS) has become one of the most strategically important control points in modern security architectures. In modern environments, DNS functions as a universal dependency across on-premises networks, cloud platforms, SaaS applications, and remote workforces. Every meaningful digital interaction begins with DNS. When a user clicks a link, opens an email attachment, launches a cloud application, or when malware attempts to contact command-and-control infrastructure, DNS resolution is typically the first required step.
DNS is not only foundational to nearly all Internet communications, but it is also the first observable point of most cyberattacks. As a result, DNS provides defenders with a rare opportunity to observe and disrupt attacks at their earliest possible stage.
- Why is DNS security no longer a supporting capability, but rather a primary defensive layer in modern enterprise security architectures?
- How are threat actors exploiting DNS infrastructure and impacting the growth trajectory of DNS security?
- How can enterprises adopt preemptive, intelligence-driven DNS security to reduce risk, complexity, and operational burden and leverage emerging growth avenues?