Malicious open-source packages are an unseen but rapidly growing threat to U.S. government. A 92% spike in identified ...
Nate Nead is the CEO of DEV.co and SEO.co. Nate and his teams specialize in custom software development, web design and digital marketing. Open-source software is becoming increasingly popular for ...
Open source software is everywhere. Open source packages are used to build mobile apps, ecommerce platforms, artificial intelligence, electric cars, streaming services… you name it. Current estimates ...
Cybersecurity company Snyk Ltd. today announced the launch of its Secure Developer Program, a new initiative designed to empower open-source software maintainers with cutting-edge, develop-friendly ...
Government interest in open-source software security is on the rise and reflects the scale upon which this code is utilized across all sectors, including critical infrastructure. The widespread usage ...
It’s a topic of fierce debate among high-tech cognoscenti: What’s more secure – “open source” code such as Linux and Apache, or proprietary “closed source” operating systems and applications, ...
Get the latest federal technology news delivered to your inbox. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency published a new roadmap Tuesday that the nation's cyber defense agency will use to ...
Vulnerabilities in open source components — such as the widespread flaws revealed 10 months ago in Log4j 2.0 — have forced data scientists to reevaluate the open source code frequently used in ...
Open source security incidents aren't going away. The reliance on open source software (OSS) increases year-over-year, with more than 95% of all software, including open source, in some capacity. From ...
Fast forward two years or so, and Nunchuk has carved itself a solid niche within the Bitcoin industry. It is the only open ...
SonarSource SA, which does business as Sonar, said today that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Tidelift Inc., a provider of services to manage open-source components. Terms weren’t ...