Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
Update Championing-Security-Scaling Security-At-Every-Level.md
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
  • Loading branch information
Alone2671 authored Dec 17, 2023
1 parent ffd75da commit 814cbd3
Showing 1 changed file with 5 additions and 7 deletions.
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -23,14 +23,12 @@ zoom_link :
---

## About this session
"No one wants their keys, passwords, and other secrets exposed. Ideally, no developer would ever hardcode anything like that into their work, but unfortunately, a lot of repos are just one bad push from the world gaining access to sensitive data and mission-critical systems. In the best-case scenario, you discover the issue and fix it before something terrible happens, but in the worse cases, you don’t find out until it is far too late. Just ask folks like Uber or Twitch.
Security teams, at best, are outnumbered 100 to 1 in their organizations. Securing every door, window, network, endpoint, device, API, and system is an overwhelmingly endless task. How can we hope to keep the enterprise secure while the threat landscape keeps evolving ever faster?

Most devs are familiar with using .env and .gitignore files to help prevent Git from tracking specific files and folders. But did you know that you can leverage git hooks, and some open source awesomeness, to keep from accidentally committing your secrets in the first place?
It is time for an age of champions. Security Champions.

Walk away from this session with some concrete actions you and your devs can take to make sure no secrets make it into your shared hosted repos ever again!
But that is just the start. If you are not actively using Git hooks in your workflows, then this talk is for you. Let's look into the .git folder and unlock a whole world of automation possibilities!
Security champions are individual team members on teams outside of security who volunteer to stay up to date with security updates and help spread the word. They look for places where security best practices can be applied and help the security team know where people are struggling and have questions.

This session will explore the guidelines put forth by some open-source communities, such as OWASPs Security Champions Guide, and learn some best practices for starting a program and getting your teams on board.

My hope with this session is to help everyone add some easy-to-implement automation to their workflows to prevent making more extreme, and costly, kind of mistakes."

### Publications:
https://blog.gitguardian.com/how-to-use-ggshield-to-avoid-hardcoded-secrets-cheat-sheet-included/

0 comments on commit 814cbd3

Please sign in to comment.