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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oladimeji, Ganiyu
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.14601
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author Oladimeji, Ganiyu
author_facet Oladimeji, Ganiyu
contents As cyber threats escalate, Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA) replaces outdated perimeter security with strict never trust, always verify protocols. However, ZTA's dual nature as both technical infrastructure and social intervention creates an unresolved tension: its very mechanisms for security may systematically erode the trust foundations enabling effective collaboration. This integrative research combines case study analysis, employee surveys, and social network mapping reveals how ZTA disrupts knowledge-sharing, disproportionately hindering low-altruism employees, while surveillance erodes collective psychological ownership. Networked organizations, reliant on fluid trust, face fragmentation risks. Mitigation strategies include adaptive authorization frameworks using behavioral analytics and transparent communication reframing security as shared responsibility. Interdepartmental collaboration in security design preserves organizational trust structures identified through sociometric mapping. This research provides a framework balancing technical rigor with cultural sensitivity, proving cybersecurity can coexist with innovation by aligning verification with organizational psychology. The findings pioneer a paradigm where security and trust evolve synergistically critical for digital resilience in hybrid work environments. Future security must harmonize protocols with trust cultivation, ensuring defenses adapt to social dynamics driving modern enterprises.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_14601
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Rethinking trust in the digital age: An investigation of zero trust architecture's social consequences on organizational culture, collaboration, and knowledge sharing
Oladimeji, Ganiyu
Emerging Technologies
As cyber threats escalate, Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA) replaces outdated perimeter security with strict never trust, always verify protocols. However, ZTA's dual nature as both technical infrastructure and social intervention creates an unresolved tension: its very mechanisms for security may systematically erode the trust foundations enabling effective collaboration. This integrative research combines case study analysis, employee surveys, and social network mapping reveals how ZTA disrupts knowledge-sharing, disproportionately hindering low-altruism employees, while surveillance erodes collective psychological ownership. Networked organizations, reliant on fluid trust, face fragmentation risks. Mitigation strategies include adaptive authorization frameworks using behavioral analytics and transparent communication reframing security as shared responsibility. Interdepartmental collaboration in security design preserves organizational trust structures identified through sociometric mapping. This research provides a framework balancing technical rigor with cultural sensitivity, proving cybersecurity can coexist with innovation by aligning verification with organizational psychology. The findings pioneer a paradigm where security and trust evolve synergistically critical for digital resilience in hybrid work environments. Future security must harmonize protocols with trust cultivation, ensuring defenses adapt to social dynamics driving modern enterprises.
title Rethinking trust in the digital age: An investigation of zero trust architecture's social consequences on organizational culture, collaboration, and knowledge sharing
topic Emerging Technologies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.14601