Taming Network Policy Sprawl with AI

Zero-trust and micro-segmentation have become the default direction for enterprise network security, and for good reason. But the shift has introduced an operational problem that few organizations were ready for: an explosion of fragmented rules, overlapping policies and billions of complex access paths that no human team can realistically manage on its own.

Alan Shimel and Jody Brazil, CEO of FireMon, get into the messy reality of what network security policy management looks like at scale today. Brazil has been working in this space for years and describes how the move toward more granular access controls, while correct from a security standpoint, has created an administrative burden that is growing faster than most teams can keep up with. Every new segmentation rule, every zero trust policy adjustment and every cloud migration adds layers of complexity that compound over time.

The practical challenge is not just writing policies but understanding what they actually do in aggregate. When an enterprise has thousands of rules spread across firewalls, cloud environments and hybrid infrastructure, the interactions between those rules create access paths that are nearly impossible to audit manually. A single misconfigured rule can quietly open a path that undermines an otherwise well-designed security posture, and finding it without automation is like searching for a needle in a haystack made of other needles.

Brazil makes the case that AI-driven analytics are becoming essential for bringing order back to this sprawl, not by replacing security teams but by giving them the ability to actually see and reason about the full scope of their policy landscape. For security practitioners dealing with policy complexity that has outgrown their tooling, this is a grounded look at where the problem stands and what it takes to regain control.

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Alan Shimel

Throughout his career spanning over 25 years in the IT industry, Alan Shimel has been at the forefront of leading technology change. From hosting and infrastructure, to security and now DevOps, Shimel is an industry leader whose opinions and views are widely sought after.

Alan’s entrepreneurial ventures have seen him found or co-found several technology related companies including TriStar Web, StillSecure, The CISO Group, MediaOps, Inc., DevOps.com and the DevOps Institute. He has also helped several companies grow from startup to public entities and beyond. He has held a variety of executive roles around Business and Corporate Development, Sales, Marketing, Product and Strategy.

Alan is also the founder of the Security Bloggers Network, the Security Bloggers Meetups and awards which run at various Security conferences and Security Boulevard.

Most recently Shimel saw the impact that DevOps and related technologies were going to have on the Software Development Lifecycle and the entire IT stack. He founded DevOps.com and then the DevOps Institute. DevOps.com is the leading destination for all things DevOps, as well as the producers of multiple DevOps events called DevOps Connect. DevOps Connect produces DevSecOps and Rugged DevOps tracks and events at leading security conferences such as RSA Conference, InfoSec Europe and InfoSec World. The DevOps Institute is the leading provider of DevOps education, training and certification.

Alan has a BA in Government and Politics from St Johns University, a JD from New York Law School and a lifetime of business experience. His legal education, long experience in the field, and New York street smarts combine to form a unique personality that is always in demand to appear at conferences and events.

alan has 170 posts and counting.See all posts by alan