Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Snyk

Snyk Open Source in 2021: A year of innovation

More than 90% of organizations rely on open source software, a reliance that introduces a significant amount of security and legal risk via either direct or transitive open source dependencies. To overcome this challenge, Software Composition Analysis (SCA) solutions are playing an increasingly important role in helping organizations successfully identify and mitigate potential security issues.

Snyk Code in 2021: Redefining SAST

Starting in early 2021, Snyk Code and became available as a freemium offering for Snyk users. Snyk Code helps developers quickly and accurately find, prioritize, and fix security flaws in proprietary code. With detailed remediation guidance at every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from the developer’s environment (IDE) to continuous integration and development (CI/CD) pipelines, Snyk Code revolutionizes static application security testing (SAST).

Live Hacking: Find Vulnerabilities in Your Apps Before Hackers Do

As cloud-native technologies disrupt the Application Security (AppSec) market, forward-thinking enterprises are shifting their security to the left. A range of cutting-edge security platforms is now available, empowering developers to build secure applications within the development process. But what do secure applications look like, and why does it matter? Why are enterprises implementing security during the deployment phase?

Snyk makes it easier to fix Log4Shell with extended free scans

Due to the recently discovered Log4Shell vulnerability, and to support the tremendous effort being mounted by the community to address it, we are happy to announce that we are increasing the free test limit in Snyk Open Source! This means that any developer, no matter the company or project, can now use Snyk Open Source to find and fix Log4Shell with double the number of free tests, whether it’s within your IDE, your Git repositories, CI environments, or using the Snyk CLI.

Log4j 2.16 High Severity Vulnerability (CVE-2021-45105) Discovered

Overnight, it was disclosed by Apache that Log4j version 2.16 is also vulnerable by way of a Denial of Service attack with the impact being a full application crash, the severity for this is classified as High (7.5). Snyk is currently not aware of any fully-fledged PoCs or exploits in circulation. CVE-2021-45105 has been issued, and a new fixed version (2.17) has been published by Apache which we recommend upgrading to.

DevSecOps and Data Engineering

As security is adopted more in the shift left devsecops approach it brings with it a re-examining of the full SDLC. This is increasingly important not only as part of security policies and app handling but also ensuring the protection of infrastructure, data and end user app experiences. In this Snyk Live episode we are joined by Saman Fatima, sharing experiences around security practices and approach. Looking at DevSecOps practices like IAM and how security can apply to data engineering.

How do we solve a problem like Log4shell?

With the infamous Log4shell vulnerability spread far and without any direct fixes available yet, what do we do? Our panel of Java champions discuss the immediate reality, the near term solutions, and how the community can help itself and its members Speakers Host - Randall Degges | Head of Developer Relations & Community at Snyk Ana-Maria Mihalceanu | Developer Advocate Red Hat Martijn Verburg | Principal Engineering Group Manager (Java) at Microsoft