惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
S
Securelist
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
C
Cisco Blogs
B
Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
T
Tenable Blog
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
月光博客
月光博客
Latest news
Latest news
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
I
InfoQ
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
W
WeLiveSecurity
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
U
Unit 42
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
博客园 - 聂微东
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
罗磊的独立博客
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
I
Intezer
GbyAI
GbyAI
Jina AI
Jina AI
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
博客园 - 司徒正美
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
D
Docker
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
小众软件
小众软件
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
爱范儿
爱范儿
Project Zero
Project Zero

Security @ Cisco Blogs

We third-party tested our firewall built for AI-scale. The test tools hit their limit first. SharpHound Recon Attack - How AI enhanced the threat hunt Machine Speed, Human Judgement: How AI Changed the SOC in 2026 Elevating Expertise in the SOC Educate at Event Speed: Cisco Live Security Operations Center What Working the Cisco Live SOC Taught Me About AI, Detection, and Response Cable to Cloud - A Product Engineer's Journey Through the Cisco Live AMER 2026 SOC The Experience Dividend: How Better Digital Experience Protects Revenue, Trust, and Growth AIM: Building an Agentic Tier-2 SOC Analyst at Cisco Live AMER 2026 Building the Agentic SOC at Cisco Live Americas 2026 Ten Years in the SOC at RSAC: What We Learned in 2026 Uplevelling Black Hat Threat Hunters Making Workflow Runs Explain Themselves: AI-Powered Run Summaries in Cisco XDR Automate Independent Testing Confirms Secure Email Threat Defense’s Email Security Strength Defenseclaw for On-Prem AI SOC Workflow at Black Hat Asia Cisco Secure Access with MCP Infrastructure at Black Hat Asia 2026 The Essence of Black Hat – Collaboration with Partners Black Hat Asia 2026: A Decade in Singapore Black Hat Asia 2026: Threat Hunters’ Corner Unveiling the Power of Integration: XDR, Splunk, Corelight, Arista and Palo Alto Networks in Action at Black Hat Asia Security in the Post-Mythos Era Extending Zero Trust Across the Agentic AI Workflow Strengthening the Foundation: A Predictable, Customer focused Response to AI-Accelerated Vulnerability Discovery Quantum Resilience Needs a Common Language. Here’s Where to Start. Security at Cisco Live: Going Shields Up for the Agentic Era Identity Elevated: A New Unified Identity Experience in Cisco Cloud Control Security Needs a New Operating Model Cisco Secure Access and Microsoft Purview Integration for Simplified Data Protection Cisco Secure Access and Island Browser Enable Zero Trust Everywhere Finding what lives between the alerts: Announcing Cisco Talos Threat Hunting From Log Flood to Threat Signal: Cisco and Splunk Bring Context to Modern Defense Cisco Secure Access and Microsoft Edge for Business Integration Why Network Segmentation Projects Fail: Four Patterns Cisco’s Risk-Based Vulnerability Disclosure in the Age of AI Enhancing Cisco Secure Email Gateway: Safer Clicks and Cleaner Files AI-generated reporting: Lessons learned from Cisco Talos Incident Response Inside the SOC: AI-powered DNS defense against ransomware Security Insights: A Threat-First View for the Platform That Enforces Access From Strategy to Architecture: How Cisco is Building a Quantum-Safe Future AI-Ready, Simpler, and More Secure WAN: Cisco SD-WAN Innovations Designing for What’s Next: Securing AI-Scale Infrastructure Without Compromise Preparing for Post-Quantum Cryptography: The Secure Firewall Roadmap Mobile World Congress 2026: AI-powered Network Security Powering MWC Barcelona – Building a Unified SOC and NOC with Splunk in Record Time AI-powered Network Security at the Mobile World Congress 2026 SNOC Inside the Mobile World Congress 2026 SOC: Detecting Shadow Traffic with Firepower 6100 Data Optimization in Security: A Splunk Architect’s Perspective Inside the Talos 2025 Year in Review: A discussion on what the data means for defenders Zero Trust for Agentic AI: Safeguarding your Digital Workforce The Agent Trust gap: What Our Research Reveals About Agentic AI Security Meet Your Incident Responders
Cisco SASE with Meraki: Get in the Fast Lane to SASE
Max Cornell · 2026-06-09 · via Security @ Cisco Blogs

We have all seen the diagram: users over here, apps over there, data in multiple clouds, a data center, and a SaaS platform someone bought with a credit card. Meanwhile, IT is expected to make all of it secure. Simple, right?

Hybrid work changed the shape of the network. People work from branches, home offices, airports, customer sites, and yes, occasionally from the sidelines of a youth soccer game. Applications live in data centers, public cloud, SaaS platforms, and increasingly AI tools and model ecosystems. The old assumption that security starts at a single perimeter feels more nostalgic than useful.

That is why I am excited to share that Cisco SASE with Meraki is now generally available.

For teams already running Meraki MX, this is a practical way to move from SD-WAN toward a complete SASE architecture without turning the project into a six-month tunnel-building festival. You keep the Meraki experience you know, then connect it to Cisco Secure Access for cloud-delivered Security Service Edge (SSE) protection.

What We Built

Cisco SASE with Meraki connects Meraki SD-WAN sites to Cisco Secure Access, Cisco’s cloud-delivered SSE solution. Meraki remains the place for SD-WAN management and AutoVPN connectivity into the SSE fabric. Secure Access remains the place for security policies and SSE configuration. Seamless integration means that everyone gets a clearer operating model.

AutoVPN Secure Access

Less Tunnel Work, More Progress

No one wakes up hoping to spend their afternoon hand-crafting tunnels. With Cisco SASE with Meraki, Meraki AutoVPN can automatically establish secure primary and backup tunnels between enrolled MX sites and Cisco Secure Access. In internal testing, that drove up to 15X faster deployment compared with manual tunnel creation. 

The same automation also helps resiliency. Each enrolled Meraki SD-WAN appliance can establish multiple AutoVPN tunnels across available uplinks to two Secure Access data centers. If a tunnel goes down, the system can fail over without sending an administrator on a scavenger hunt through configuration screens. 

For lean IT teams, that is the point. Less repetitive setup. Less brittle plumbing. More time for work that actually improves security and user experience.

I already have security protection in my Meraki SD-WAN, don’t I?

Yes, Meraki SD-WAN includes security protections that organizations widely use. However, today’s highly decentralized environment and wildly changing threat landscape means that often, that is no longer sufficient. With this integration, organizations can steer selected traffic through Cisco’s SSE services and apply deeper protection for internet, SaaS, private application, and remote access use cases. Key additional security protections will:

  • Discover and secure the accelerating use of Gen AI, AI model repositories, and AI agents
  • Enable highly granular, least-privilege access for remote users
  • Infuse detailed information about posture, identity, and dynamic threat levels to inform access decisions
  • Prevent the loss or leakage of sensitive data and intellectual property

With Cisco Secure Access, you gain the value of multiple security capabilities unified into one solution, such as Secure Web Gateway (SWG) for web protection and control, Zero Trust Access (ZTA) for granular private app access, Firewall as a Service (FWaaS) and intrusion prevention, Cloud Access Security Broker (CASB), Data Loss Prevention (DLP), and more. The benefit is not more security features; the benefit is security that can be applied closer to where users and applications actually are, with policy managed centrally and enforced through the cloud.

Built for NetOps and SecOps

I talk with customers who are trying to converge networking and security, but they do not want to blur every role into one giant operational soup. For larger organizations, there is typically a NetOps and SecOps team. For midsized organizations, the same people often manage both networking and security. In either case, they still need to balance requirements. Networking managers care deeply about routing, fail over, site health, and WAN performance. Security managers care about identity, access, data protection, threat defense, and policy consistency. 

Cisco SASE with Meraki respects that reality. 

Networking roles can use the familiar Meraki dashboard for SD-WAN connectivity, site onboarding, and VPN visibility. Security roles can use Cisco Secure Access for cloud security profiles and policies. The result is a unified architecture with team-specific workflows. 

That is not just cleaner on a slide. It is easier to operate on a Tuesday afternoon when something needs to be changed, validated, or fixed.

Iterative. No Rip and Replace.

Most organizations do not get to rebuild from scratch. They have branches, hubs, cloud apps, private apps, existing routes, maintenance windows, and users who would very much like the network to keep working. 

Cisco SASE with Meraki is designed for that real world. Meraki spokes can establish new AutoVPN tunnels to Secure Access while maintaining existing MX hub tunnels and connectivity. That gives teams flexibility as they plan migration, routing, and policy changes. 

It lets organizations increase protection iteratively. Start with the traffic and sites that make sense. Expand as your policies, teams, and architecture are ready. SASE is a journey, but it should not feel like a cliff. 

Keep the Good. Keep it Simple.

SASE can sound big because, well… it does a lot.. But the operating model should feel simpler, not heavier. 

Cisco SASE with Meraki gives Meraki customers a fast, secure, and resilient approach to bring SD-WAN traffic into Cisco Secure Access. It helps administrators reduce manual work. It helps managers lower operational complexity. And it helps organizations protect users, devices, and applications wherever work happens. 

That is the kind of launch I like as a product manager: meaningful architecture, real simplicity, and a little less time spent lovingly maintaining tunnels.  

Learn more


We’d love to hear what you think! Ask a question and stay connected with Cisco Security on social media.

Cisco Security Social Media

LinkedIn
Facebook
Instagram