Read on for some helpful tips on how to integrate your security practices with your DevOps initiative and get your DevSecOps up and running.
Companies that lead with application security have security practitioners willing and able to lead
Aqua Security looks to take lion’s share of emerging container security space
Learn how to use secret injection to ensure your secret doesn’t get written to disk, resulting in a more secure development environment.
Aqua’s security platform for Docker container-based applications is a comprehensive solution. With features that include risk management for the container development pipeline, full CI/CD automation, advanced runtime defenses that include automated profiling of container behavior, network nano-segmentation for containers, and secrets management, it simplifies the process securing containerized applications and removes obstacles to adopting Docker in the enterprise.
eWeek lists Aqua among 10 vendors that are providing container security solutions and services.
A common concern of running a container environment is how to ensure that only authorized images can run as containers. Organizations are also challenged with finding a way to implement software and configuration standards in those images, across all product groups and development teams.
Everyone is talking about containers these days, but what do containers actually mean for software development? There are many different pieces involved to put a successful containerized application together. SD Times caught up with Liz Rice, technology evangelist for container security specialist Aqua Security, to talk about a very important piece: Namespaces. Rice will be speaking at this week’s DockerCon about namespaces, and what they can do for containers.