Technically U
đ Is your private network actually secure⌠or just private? In Part 3 of our Wavelength Services series on Technically U, we dive into encrypted Wavelength servicesâand why security at the optical layer is becoming critical for modern enterprise networks. Even with HTTPS, VPNs, and application-layer encryption, your data still travels across carrier-owned fiber infrastructure. And yesâfiber tapping is rare, but itâs possible. Thatâs why organizations handling sensitive data are adding encryption at the Wave layer for true defense in depth. đŻ In this episode, youâll learn: Why optical layer encryption mattersâeven if you already use TLS or IPsec The real-world risks of fiber tapping and physical infrastructure exposure The three main encryption approaches: Layer 1 (OTN) Encryption â maximum security at the optical layer MACsec (Layer 2) â the enterprise standard for low-latency encryption IPsec (Layer 3) â familiar but less efficient for high-speed Waves Key tradeoffs in latency, throughput, and packet overhead How MACsec (IEEE 802.1AE) works and why itâs widely adopted The role of AES-256-GCM encryption in securing optical traffic Customer-managed vs Carrier-managed encryption models Best practices for key management, HSMs, and key rotation Emerging risks like quantum computing (âharvest now, decrypt laterâ) Compliance frameworks driving encryption requirements: FIPS 140-2 / 140-3PCI-DSSHIPAANSA CSfC (Commercial Solutions for Classified) đ¨ Key Insight: A dedicated Wavelength circuit is privateâbut without encryption, itâs not fully secure. Optical-layer encryption ensures that even if fiber is compromised, your data remains unreadable. đĄ Who should care about encrypted Waves? Financial institutions and trading platforms Healthcare organizations handling patient data Government and defense contractors Enterprises moving sensitive intellectual property Any organization with high-value data in transit đ§ Technically U â Tech made simple. One packet at a time. đ Full Series Recap: Part 1: What Wavelength services are and how they work Part 2: Engineering for resiliency (failover, protection, redundancy) Part 3: Security and encryption at the optical layer
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