Access Control Babylon ((link)) -
What are your thoughts? Are we ready to move beyond the centralized access control models of the past, or is the convenience of Babylon worth the risk? Share below.
They will sell you "passwordless" and "zero trust." But read the fine print: the zero trust is still a centralized trust in their cloud. access control babylon
We live in an era obsessed with gates.
But we now know central authorities can be compromised, bribed, or wrong. The entire history of modern access control—from Kerberos to OAuth to SAML—is a series of increasingly complex patches to answer: How can the gatekeeper be sure you are you, without the gatekeeper being a single point of failure? What are your thoughts
There isn't. The deep problem is theological. Babylonian access control asks: Does the central authority trust you? They will sell you "passwordless" and "zero trust
To understand where access control is failing—and where it must go—we need to visit a city that no longer exists but whose architectural DNA still surrounds us: The Original Walled Garden Ancient Babylon was not just a city; it was a statement. Its most famous feature wasn't the Hanging Gardens—it was the Ishtar Gate . A massive, glazed-brick portal guarded by dragons and bulls, it was the world’s most sophisticated physical access control system.
The answer emerging from cryptography is radical: Enter the New Archetype: Not Babylon, But the Bazaar If Babylon represents centralized, hierarchical, perimeter-based access, the counterpoint is not another city. It is the protocol .