| By Theresa Bui-Friday | Article Rating: |
|
| May 23, 2008 02:15 PM EDT | Reads: |
10,790 |
IDC Research has called the use of open
source “the most significant, all-encompassing and long-term trend that the
software industry has seen since the early 1980s.” [1] The study also
revealed that open source was being used by 71% of worldwide developers, and
was in production at 54% of their companies. Although upper management has only
recently signed off on its use, developers have long understood that open
source is the fastest (and cheapest) path to software innovation.
For good reasons, developers have been coding around OSS components for many years – it’s extremely accessible, it’s collaborative, and it’s free. While OSS offers clear benefits to application development, it also poses unique challenges to application security.
The sheer size of an application code base coupled with the number of contributing developers makes it nearly impossible for companies to get accurate documentation of OSS inventory and usage. Without this information, security vulnerabilities, copyright violations, and license requirements often go unnoticed. Undocumented code represents a significant gap in application security coverage that can lead to:
- Loss of critical customer data
- Release or theft of corporate confidential information
- Emergency remediation to resolve license obligations
- Financial loss due to legal action, fines, and/or product rework
- Disruption of service
Published May 23, 2008 Reads 10,790
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
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More Stories By Theresa Bui-Friday
As VP of Product Marketing, Theresa Bui-Friday is responsible for Palamida's positioning, core communications content, go-to-market initiatives, and press and analyst relations team. She has over 12 years' of expertise in the software industry with a focus on emerging technology. Prior to Palamida, Theresa was Director of Strategic Marketing at Cacheon. She was also Director of Enterprise Marketing for Embark.com, which is now Princeton Review, where she held global responsibility for product marketing of the enterprise product lines, including competitive and market evaluation, strategic planning and outbound marketing programs.
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