Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

The First Step to Achieving DevSecOps Is Shifting Security Culture Left

To achieve DevSecOps you need to shift security left. Sounds simple, right? Well, it’s easier said than done. A recent survey conducted by SANS Institute found that 74 percent of organizations are deploying software changes more than once per month – an increase in velocity of nearly 14 percent over the past four years. To release software monthly, weekly, or even daily, security has to be integrated into the development process, not tacked on at the end.

The impact of credential stuffing on credit unions

According to Netacea’s latest research ‘The Bot Management Review: the challenge of high awareness and limited understanding’, 95% of financial services surveyed stated that they had experienced a bot attack over the past two years. Since financial services often store highly sensitive and personal information, it is essential that the security measures that they have in place can detect even the most sophisticated of bots.

How often should you perform vulnerability scanning? Best practices shared

To understand how often vulnerability scanning should be performed, it’s important to delve into the drivers behind this objective. Vulnerability management includes the treatment of risks identified during the vulnerability assessments. This is a vital element of the risk management regime for any organisation. Without making informed choices around risk appetite, an organisation may not get the best out of a vulnerability management programme.

Kubernetes Quick Hits: SecurityContext and why not to run as root

In this, the first of our series of our Kubernetes Quick Hits videos, Eric Smalling–Sr. In less than five minutes, you understand why you need to *not* run your containers as root and what to do about it if you are. Snyk helps software-driven businesses develop fast and stay secure. In addition to container security scans, Snyk can continuously monitor to find and fix vulnerabilities for npm, Maven, NuGet, RubyGems, PyPI and more.

Secure Coding with IntelliJ

How can I do security in IntelliJ? Is there a security code scanner for IntelliJ? How can I test for security in Java? Is there a Snyk plug-in for IntelliJ? Make sure to subscribe so you don't miss new content! We know that IntelliJ IDEA is the most favorite and commonly used IDE in the Java landscape and a lot of developers practically live in their integrated development environment (IDE). A good IDE is like a swiss army knife; it is your go-to tool to do almost everything. Let’s see how we can integrate security and secure development into IntelliJ IDEA using this new Snyk plugin.

What I Wish I Knew About U2F and Other Hardware MFA Protocols

Teleport has supported multi-factor authentication (MFA) for a while now, via Authenticator Apps (TOTP) and Hardware Tokens (U2F) such as YubiKeys. But this support was pretty limited: you could only choose one MFA protocol and users could only register one device. If a user lost their device, they would be locked out and need an account reset by the administrator. So, for Teleport 6.0, we’ve reimplemented the MFA support to make it more flexible.

The Zero Trust lesson behind mobile phishing against Australian officials

Australia recently confirmed that a series of mobile phishing attacks were successfully executed on senior officials. According to The Sydney Morning Herald, the targets – which included Australia’s finance minister, health minister and ambassador to the U.S. – were sent messages asking them to validate new WhatsApp or Telegram accounts.