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Containerization originated in 2001 as a project that allowed several general-purpose Linux servers to run on a single box with autonomy and security. Google launched its container orchestration platform Kubernetes (K8s) in 2014, announcing the launch of over 2 billion containers weekly. Advantages.
By Bob Gourley The agenda for the 3rd Annual Cloudera Federal Forum (6 Feb 2014, Hanover MD) has firmed up and will no doubt lead to an incredible event. He previously lead Cloudera’s Platform team, is an active contributor to Apache Hadoop and is a member of its project management committee (PMC) at the Apache Software Foundation.
Microsoft has spent the past 10 years embracing open-source software and, at several points, even admitting it loves Linux and the open source community. The Linux Foundation even praised Microsoft for working with the open source community after the company joined the foundation nearly five years ago.
Automakers want to standardize on a Linux-based OS that would make vehicle infotainment systems act more like smartphones. Automakers are working to standardize on a Linux-based operating system for in-vehicle infotainment (IVI) systems that would make it easier for cars to act more like smartphones. In Vehicle Infotainment.
This episode looks at how fuzz testing has evolved over the years, how open source projects have for the most part gone untested over time, and how new efforts to match fuzzing to softwaredevelopment are today helping to discover dangerous new vulnerabilities before they become the next Shellshock. And it's a doozy program.
This episode looks at how fuzz testing has evolved over the years, how open source projects have for the most part gone untested over time, and how new efforts to match fuzzing to softwaredevelopment are today helping to discover dangerous new vulnerabilities before they become the next Shellshock. And it's a doozy program.
In this episode I talk about how Heartbleed (CVE 2014-0160) was found and also interview Rauli Kaksonen, someone who was at Codenomicon at the time of its discovery and is now a senior security specialist at the University of Oulu in Finland, about how new security tools are still needed to find the next big zero day. That much was obvious.
In this episode I talk about how Heartbleed (CVE 2014-0160) was found and also interview Rauli Kaksonen, someone who was at Codenomicon at the time of its discovery and is now a senior security specialist at the University of Oulu in Finland, about how new security tools are still needed to find the next big zero day. That much was obvious.
In this episode I talk about how Heartbleed (CVE 2014-0160) was found and also interview Rauli Kaksonen, someone who was at Codenomicon at the time of its discovery and is now a senior security specialist at the University of Oulu in Finland, about how new security tools are still needed to find the next big zero day. That much was obvious.
But to find that information back in 2014, he had to scan the Internet, the entire internet and that was a very noisy process. So we have far less users for Mac and Linux than we have on Windows. Vamosi: Most antivirus products are found on Windows, much less so on Mac and Linux. It infects Linux, BSD, Solaris, and others.
So fuzzing is a way during softwaredevelopment where you sort of proactively. Knudsen: Normally I would use virtual machines for this, I go install Linux and install the other stuff and work away at the command line until I got to where I wanted it to be. They both were found in 2014.
It was not a literal time machine, but a way of capturing the softwaredevelopment process by recording intervals and storing them in the close. Then, when a vulnerability was discovered later on, a developer could go back in time and find the moment the fault was introduced into the code. It's every bit as fast as Linux.
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