Avenger & Tyrex
Tyrex Tyrex
We need a perimeter that stays locked when the world keeps trying to break in. Have you ever tried to map out a zero‑trust zone for a city’s critical infrastructure? I’ve run the math on it and I’m still waiting for the audit to confirm my assumption that every node is a potential backdoor. How do you keep your mission lines clear from the grey areas of the enemy?
Avenger Avenger
Keep every node on a strict zero‑trust list, no implicit trust, no assumptions. If you can’t prove an action is safe, it’s a gray zone and you cut it off. The perimeter stays locked when you treat every potential backdoor as a threat and never let doubt creep in.
Tyrex Tyrex
Sounds like a textbook playbook. I’ll add one more line: never let any service talk to the Internet without a signed, audited key, and audit that key yourself. That’s how I keep the line tight.
Avenger Avenger
Good. Lock every service to a signed key, audit it yourself, and never let any traffic slip through without proof. Keep the perimeter tight and the lines clear.
Tyrex Tyrex
Got it. I’ll lock the keys, audit every sign, and block the traffic until it passes the test. No slip, no doubt.
Avenger Avenger
Good plan. Keep the keys locked, the audits tight, and the traffic sealed. No slip, no doubt.
Tyrex Tyrex
All set. Keys are locked, audits scheduled, traffic sealed. No slip, no doubt.