Trust No One, Not Even Your Toaster
This new paranoia has accelerated a concept that was once on the fringes, zero-trust architecture. It sounds a bit dramatic, but the principle is simple. In the old days, you trusted people inside your network. Now, you trust no one. Every single request for access, from anyone, anywhere, must be verified. It’s like having to show your passport not just at the border, but at the hotel check-in, the restaurant, and the gift shop.
This whole 'trust nobody' philosophy is a massive undertaking, and it's creating a clear investment narrative. It’s the kind of structural shift that underpins themes like the Digital Trust & Transparency basket, which groups together the very companies selling these new digital locks and keys. Of course, no investment is without risk, and the cybersecurity space is fiercely competitive. But the demand created by this regulatory shift seems structural, not cyclical. Companies are being forced to invest, whether they want to or not. This isn't a discretionary purchase anymore, it's becoming as essential as paying the electricity bill.