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Sitting through a number of presentations at various cyber conferences recently I’m struck that many enterprises cyber security planning comes down to having ‘the best people’ doing really pretty boring jobs. Programmable meat is expensive, fallible and has to sleep.
In the white board session, Dr. Brumley references DevSecOps starting in 1976 with a paper at an IEEE conference. This is how you get DevOps. There’s also web application firewalls. As it is developed, requirements may change as the software evolves. It’s that evolution that needs to include security.
In the white board session, Dr. Brumley references DevSecOps starting in 1976 with a paper at an IEEE conference. This is how you get DevOps. There’s also web application firewalls. As it is developed, requirements may change as the software evolves. It’s that evolution that needs to include security.
In the white board session, Dr. Brumley references DevSecOps starting in 1976 with a paper at an IEEE conference. This is how you get DevOps. There’s also web application firewalls. As it is developed, requirements may change as the software evolves. It’s that evolution that needs to include security.
Network filters applied by solutions like Web Application Firewalls (WAFs) aim to solve symptoms, not the root cause. They acutely feel the pain from a) having mission-critical systems to secure, and b) having to deal with both having no source code and fitting into DevOps situations. This is an easy band-aid.
Network filters applied by solutions like Web Application Firewalls (WAFs) aim to solve symptoms, not the root cause. They acutely feel the pain from a) having mission-critical systems to secure, and b) having to deal with both having no source code and fitting into DevOps situations. This is an easy band-aid.
Network filters applied by solutions like Web Application Firewalls (WAFs) aim to solve symptoms, not the root cause. They acutely feel the pain from a) having mission-critical systems to secure, and b) having to deal with both having no source code and fitting into DevOps situations. This is an easy band-aid.
Like now I'm a security expert, he has to know all that on premise stuff, you know, data centers, firewalls, etc, etc. You know, because one of the other problems is that clouds are complicated, right? EDR is SDRs for every solution you can think of, and now we're moving. Now I have an organization that's moving to AWS just as an example.
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