Integrating Zero Trust Principles into Blockchain-Oriented Financial Infrastructures

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Abstract

The convergence of blockchain and Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA) offers a transformative pathway for enhancing security and resilience in financial infrastructures. Traditional network perimeter models are increasingly inadequate for safeguarding decentralized finance (DeFi), payment systems, and digital asset platforms that operate across distributed environments. This study explores how Zero Trust principles rooted in continuous verification, least privilege access, and micro-segmentation can be effectively integrated into blockchain ecosystems to mitigate identity spoofing, insider threats, and data tampering. By examining hybrid frameworks that combine permissioned blockchains with Zero Trust access controls, the research highlights a paradigm shift toward adaptive, identity-centric security postures in financial networks. The proposed model emphasizes dynamic authentication, real-time monitoring, and cryptographic assurance to ensure trustless yet verifiable interactions among nodes and participants. This integration not only fortifies compliance with emerging regulatory standards but also enhances interoperability and transparency across multi-chain financial systems. The findings suggest that embedding Zero Trust principles within blockchain-oriented infrastructures can create a self-healing, auditable, and future-ready digital finance ecosystem.

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