Amir Jerbi, CTO of container security company Aqua Security, said MSSPs are a at a level of maturity that is often as good as or better than in-house security.
This month our Container & DevSecOps Digest features stories from DockerCon Austin, which was the biggest Docker event to date with over 5,000 attendees. At RedHat we heard about a new service called OpenShift.io, an online development environment dedicated to containers only; and in Australia container adoption is steadily increasing so for the very first time, a conference dedicated to container technology will take plance in Sydney (and we even have a special price for you!).
How are containers changing DevOps? By enabling DevSecOps. That, at least, is the message from Aqua Security, which is pushing the thesis that containers are the key to achieving automated, predictable security operations.
If an enterprise lets a third party onto their network, regardless of the reason, that third party then becomes an integral part of their security perimeter, notes Amir Jerbi, CTO of container security company Aqua Security. “Organizations should therefore vet third parties for their security measures and practices and ensure they are aligned with their own, and furthermore, periodically check and test those practices to verify they are still in compliance. These checks may (and should) cover systems, process and people.”
Learn how system calls can handle a lot of processes, simple and complex, in Linux applications
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