The NetBird docs [1] talk about "Zero Trust" being defined by NIST SP 800-207 and NIST SP 1800-35. This is also one of the definitions Wikipedia describes, with only one (uncited) mention of BeyondCorp.
Anyway, I still have no idea how this stuff is supposed to be "zero trust". It seems to place almost complete trust in the external authentication provider and also in the agent software that's rummaging around on all the clients while, as Wikipedia puts it, "checking the identity and integrity of users" (perhaps by examining the purity of the their precious bodily fluids).
The NetBird docs [1] talk about "Zero Trust" being defined by NIST SP 800-207 and NIST SP 1800-35. This is also one of the definitions Wikipedia describes, with only one (uncited) mention of BeyondCorp.
Anyway, I still have no idea how this stuff is supposed to be "zero trust". It seems to place almost complete trust in the external authentication provider and also in the agent software that's rummaging around on all the clients while, as Wikipedia puts it, "checking the identity and integrity of users" (perhaps by examining the purity of the their precious bodily fluids).
[1] https://docs.netbird.io/use-cases/implement-zero-trust