Zero Trust for Solo Developers: Why You Don't Need a Team to Secure Your Empire
In the world of software development, there is a pervasive, dangerous myth: security is the responsibility of the "big guys." When you see a Fortune 500 company with a dedicated SOC (Security Opera...

Source: DEV Community
In the world of software development, there is a pervasive, dangerous myth: security is the responsibility of the "big guys." When you see a Fortune 500 company with a dedicated SOC (Security Operations Center) team, a budget of millions, and a legal department, it makes sense that they have to worry about breaches, insider threats, and nation-state attacks. But what about the solo developer? The one-person shop working from a home office, deploying microservices to the cloud, and relying on free tiers of infrastructure. The conventional wisdom suggests that Zero Trust--security architecture that assumes no user or system is trustworthy by default--requires a complex, enterprise-grade infrastructure. Many solo developers operate under the assumption that Zero Trust is out of reach, something they can worry about "later" when they have a team. But this is a trap. Zero Trust isn't about buying expensive hardware; it is a mindset. It is a philosophy that shifts the focus from "keeping bad