






















As organizations adopt both on-premises firewalls and cloud-delivered SASE, security becomes more distributed and complex. Users connect from headquarters, branch offices, and remote locations, expecting the same secure and seamless internet experience everywhere. When Internet Access policies across firewalls and SASE are managed separately, maintaining consistency becomes harder, increasing the risk of human error and misconfiguration.
The 2026 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report found that misconfiguration is one of the top recurring error types in breaches year after year, noting that, “the fact that Misconfiguration remains among the top errors over time is rather concerning.” In environments with separate Internet Access policies, that risk is built into the architecture.
Managing policies across multiple systems requires security teams to manually replicate updates and continuously validate alignment. This impacts efficiency and time to value, but more importantly, it leads to errors and differences between environments over time.
For example, managing separate Internet Access policies across SASE and firewalls can result in:
The result is a fragmented security posture, where enforcement is inconsistent and depends on where users connect from instead of being based on a single policy.
A unified Internet Access policy replaces this fragmented model with a single, consistent framework.
Instead of managing multiple versions of the same policy, organizations can define access rules once, manage them from a single console, and enforce them consistently across firewalls and SASE environments.
The benefits of a Unified Internet Access Policy:
Rather than constantly aligning policies, security teams can focus on maintaining one accurate and consistent policy.
See how Check Point Unified Internet Access Policy can strengthen your organization’s protection. Book a demo today.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。