What is an Air Gap?

An air gap is a physical or logical separation between two networks, with no direct connection between them (such as cables, Wifi or Bluetooth). The aim is to keep a system fully isolated from other networks, particularly the internet or corporate IT.

An air-gapped system is therefore unreachable over normal networks and provides a high level of protection against external attacks or Malware infections.


🧠 Why use an air gap?

Air gaps are used in situations where maximum security and reliability are required. They prevent sensitive systems from being affected by:


🏭 Applications of air gaps

Application Explanation
Nuclear facilities No connection to the internet or external networks
Industrial control systems (ICS) PLC, SCADA, RTU or DCS systems kept fully separate
Government / defence Protection of classified or state-sensitive information
Backup servers Prevent ransomware from also encrypting backups

πŸ”§ Examples of an air gap

  • An industrial computer that is never connected to a network
  • Data exchange only via USB stick or CD/DVD, with manual approval
  • Use of data diodes to permit one-way traffic only

❗ Drawbacks of an air gap

While highly secure, an air gap also has drawbacks:

  • More difficult updates and management (manual transfer of patches/software)
  • Complexity in log collection and monitoring
  • Risk of human error during physical data transfers (β€œsneakernet”)

πŸ“Œ In summary

An air gap is a powerful network isolation measure that ensures a system is fully decoupled from other networks. It is mostly used in critical infrastructure where availability and security are critical.