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Crafting Secure Software

Crafting Secure Software

By : Greg Bulmash, Thomas Segura
5 (1)
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Crafting Secure Software

Crafting Secure Software

5 (1)
By: Greg Bulmash, Thomas Segura

Overview of this book

Drawing from GitGuardian's extensive experience in securing millions of lines of code for organizations worldwide, Crafting Secure Software takes you on an exhaustive journey through the complex world of software security and prepares you to face current and emerging security challenges confidently. Authored by security experts, this book provides unique insights into the software development lifecycle (SDLC) and delivers actionable advice to help you mitigate and prevent risks. From securing code-writing tools and secrets to ensuring the integrity of the source code and delivery pipelines, you’ll get a good grasp on the threat landscape, uncover best practices for protecting your software, and craft recommendations for future-proofing against upcoming security regulations and legislation. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained a clear vision of the improvements needed in your security posture, along with concrete steps to implement them, empowering you to make informed decisions and take decisive action in safeguarding your software assets.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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Appendix: Glossary of Acronyms and Abbreviations: Index

Risk assessment

While threat modeling is a technical activity that is more objective in nature, using risk assessment is more subjective and tied to your priorities, needs, and sensitivities.

Integrating risk assessment to rank the threats

Risk assessment takes two main vectors into account—likelihood and damage:

  • Likelihood: How likely is the threat to manifest? This takes into account how prized the result will be to an attacker and how easily they could get that result given your current defenses.
  • Damage: What would be the actual impact if an attacker successfully manifested the threat? Would it create additional threats? Would it expose anything of value to theft or discovery?

An example of a common threat is an automated “bot” filling out and submitting a form to register as a website user.

For example, a decade ago, it was easy for people to buy tens of thousands of followers on social media sites to make themselves look influential...

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