Security Architecture

Security architecture review before design risk becomes operational risk.

Architecture work focuses on trust boundaries, identity flows, data movement, cloud design, and security controls that must hold under real adversarial pressure.

What is reviewed

System design, trust boundaries, identity flows, and controls before they become expensive to change.

Security architecture review looks at how systems are built, how data and permissions move, where trust changes, and which assumptions an attacker can challenge. The goal is practical design improvement, with clear technical reasoning behind each recommendation.

  • Threat modeling and design review
  • Cloud and identity boundary assessment
  • Authentication and authorization flow review
  • Risk-informed remediation roadmap
service: security-architecture
status: scoped

[input] business objectives
[input] technical boundaries
[output] evidence + recommendations

When it helps

Use architecture review when design decisions carry security consequences.

The service is useful before major releases, cloud migrations, identity redesigns, platform integrations, AI workflow launches, or when teams need an independent view of high-impact technical risk.

  • Architecture risk mapKey assets, trust boundaries, external dependencies, identity flows, data flows, and exposed interfaces.
  • Threat modelRelevant attacker goals, abuse cases, control assumptions, and likely paths to sensitive impact.
  • Control reviewAssessment of authentication, authorization, segmentation, logging, secrets handling, and resilience controls.
  • RoadmapPrioritized changes that engineering teams can plan, sequence, and verify without guesswork.

Architecture education

Secure architecture is mostly about boundaries, assumptions, and failure modes.

Strong architecture makes it harder for one mistake to become broad compromise. It defines what is trusted, what is isolated, what is logged, who can approve sensitive actions, and how the system behaves when something goes wrong.

Trust boundaries

A trust boundary is where the system changes how much it believes a caller, component, data source, or model output. Most design risk appears at those transitions.

Least privilege

Permissions should match the action being performed, not the convenience of implementation. Identity, service accounts, tokens, and tools should have narrow, explainable access.

Defense in depth

Controls should overlap without depending on a single perfect layer. If input validation fails, authorization, segmentation, monitoring, and response should still reduce impact.

FAQ

Security architecture questions.

Architecture review is most valuable when it is concrete: diagrams, data flows, permissions, deployments, and real operational constraints.

Do you need complete architecture documentation?

No. Existing diagrams, code references, cloud configuration, API documentation, and engineering interviews can be combined to build the working model needed for review.

Can this happen before implementation?

Yes. Early review is often the best time to find weak trust boundaries, risky identity assumptions, and missing controls before they become embedded in the design.

What systems can be reviewed?

Typical reviews cover cloud platforms, SaaS applications, APIs, identity systems, AI-enabled workflows, internal platforms, and security-sensitive integrations.

What does the final output look like?

The output includes architecture observations, risk-ranked findings, threat model notes, control recommendations, and remediation actions that engineering teams can execute.

Start with a focused review

Need assurance before launch, audit, or scale?

Share the system, product, or AI workflow you want tested. The first step is a short scoping discussion to define objectives, constraints, and the right engagement model.