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A screened subnet is an essential concept for e-commerce or any entity that has a presence in the World Wide Web or is using electronic payment systems or other network services because of the prevalence of hackers, advanced persistent threats, computer worms, botnets, and other threats to networked information systems.
In computer security, a DMZ or demilitarized zone (sometimes referred to as a perimeter network or screened subnet) is a physical or logical subnetwork that contains and exposes an organization's external-facing services to an untrusted, usually larger, network such as the Internet.
S. Safe@Office; Same-origin policy; Science DMZ Network Architecture; Screened subnet; Screening router; Security Attribute Modulation Protocol; Security controls
A bastion host is a special-purpose computer on a network specifically designed and configured to withstand attacks, so named by analogy to the bastion, a military fortification.
Dual-homed or dual-homing can refer to either an Ethernet device that has more than one network interface, for redundancy purposes, or in firewall technology, one of the firewall architectures for implementing preventive security.
Network Enclaves consist of standalone assets that do not interact with other information systems or networks. A major difference between a DMZ or demilitarized zone and a network enclave is a DMZ allows inbound and outbound traffic access, where firewall boundaries are traversed.
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What you are describing sounds more like Multitier architecture. If you have a good references for this, I think we should update the screened subnet article to reflect this. Stephen Charles Thompson 22:48, 18 October 2018 (UTC) Oppose for now: some people define a screened subnet as 'triple-homed firewall'. This is a particular implementation ...