Enterprises developing SaaS products face the challenge of balancing innovation, security, and compliance. By adopting Secure DevOps practices—integrating security into every stage of development—and implementing site reliability engineering (SRE), organizations can enhance agility while ensuring resilience and adherence to regulatory standards. Automating compliance within DevOps pipelines allows teams to maintain high-speed execution without compromising security, creating a robust framework for scalable and secure cloud-native applications.
DevSecOps in Practice: Closing the Gap Between Development Speed and Security Assurance
In the world of modern software development, speed is king. Teams are under constant pressure to release features, fix bugs and stay ahead of competitors. Yet, as development velocity increases, so does the risk of introducing vulnerabilities — an inconvenient truth that security teams have been sounding alarms about for years. This tension between speed and […]
AI’s Impact on Secure DevOps and the Future of Secure Software Development
Let’s explore how AI is reshaping secure DevOps, and what this means for the future of software development.
CloudCoreo: Get Your Cloud Security on at Jenkins World
I mentioned in a previous blog post that I’d take some more of the people pinging me about Jenkins World 2017 and post about them. One of the companies I’ve picked to highlight is CloudCoreo, makers of AWS security controls and auditing. Disclosure: My company, Ingrained Technology, has a business relationship with CloudCoreo outside of […]
Automated Testing: Remember Security
Between continuous integration (CI) and release automation (RA), we’ve come a long way in making testing both integral and automated. This testing has allowed QA staff and developers to spend more time adding value by looking at problem areas instead of running tests by hand. Shops that have CI well-integrated into their application processes and […]
DevOps and Database Security
Osterman Research recently released a survey-based report on database security. The results don’t exactly instill confidence where username breaches are concerned: While more than 50 percent of respondents felt that a breach of the database would be a serious problem for their organization, 44 percent responded that it would take more than a day to […]






