Dear OGF colleagues,
For your information and to recruit your input, the US NIST Draft document SP 800-223 provides guidance on standardizing and facilitating the sharing of HPC security postures by introducing a zone-based HPC system reference model that captures common features
of HPC systems and serves as a foundation for a system lexicon. The draft also discusses HPC system threat analysis, security postures, challenges, and recommendations.
https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/sp/800-223/draft
Another related workshop on multi-cloud technologies and zero-trust architectures will be held May 22-24, 2023 (separate from the workshop held last month for the HPC effort mentioned above but addressing similar concepts and themes). A short summary from
the web site for this event is included below. The link to this announcement is
The conference program features both leadership and actionable insight from experts in service mesh, ZTA, identity-centric security, open-source software development, and emerging NIST Special Publications. Presentations will cover a wide range of topics,
including:
- NIST recommendations for realizing zero trust principles in cloud-native applications and for securing artifacts in software supply chains
- Approaches for authentication and access control for users, services, and devices in cloud-native applications in multi-cloud environments
- The role of open source in cloud-native application security and compliance
- Best practices and common pitfalls for implementing ZTA
Policymakers, entrepreneurs, students, and cybersecurity professionals are encouraged to attend. Questions should be directed to the conference organizers.
Alan Sill, Ph.D
Managing Director, High
Performance Computing Center
Co-Director, NSF Center for Cloud and Autonomic Computing
Adjunct Professor of Physics and Astronomy
, Texas Tech University
President, Open Grid Forum