Source: jaxenter.com Developers and their applications are the backbone of organisations across the world. But in recent years, large scale security breaches have put data protection at the forefront for product development teams. With the likes of the GDPR now in place, security must be a priority. So who is stepping up to take responsibility for the Read More
Tag: Microservices Security
Source – techtarget.com Despite having brought forth a revolution in application design and deployment, microservices can create profound, even critical, security and compliance problems. To meet microservices-based development and deployment goals, you are often required to step into new areas of application design, including areas that defeat many of the traditional mechanisms for securing applications. Just as Read More
Source – itproportal.com In the world of microservices, the goal is to have a small piece of software that performs a well-defined set of tasks. Microservices are software applications that are self-contained. They are small, independently deployable modular services that run a unique process and communicate through a well-defined, lightweight mechanism to serve a specific goal. Read More
Source – techtarget.com he emergence of microservices boosts business agility, enabling rapid application development, deployment and modification. The challenge is baking in microservices security processes. Traditional security processes can’t secure microservices, because the latter work in and communicate between both internal and external environments, according to Amir Jerbi, CTO of Aqua Security, a container security platform Read More
Source – techtarget.com In this Q&A, Daniel Bryant, CTO at SpectoLabs and an independent technical consultant, talks about some of the challenges that come up when addressing microservices security and some of the tools and techniques you can use. Compared to more traditional architectures, what new challenges have microservices introduced in terms of security? Daniel Bryant: Read More
Source – business2community.com Over the decades, the monolithic, tiered approach to building software has given way to a more distributed, component-based architecture commonly referred to as “microservices,” although some components aren’t “micro” at all. Separating out an app’s services into isolated, interoperable containers has revolutionized the way developers are able to update, add to, or expand parts of an app. Read More