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Guest Post

‘Security’ is not a dirty word: How a positive approach will transform your security program

February 14, 2019

Jaap Karan Singh
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Having been on both sides of the fence, I know all too well the tension that can arise between the development team and AppSec specialists when it comes to upholding security best practice.

It’s tough; at the end of the day, a developer’s chief priority is delivering software features. They must be beautiful, functional and help showcase the power of the application. With agile development practices typically in-play these days, these features must be completed to strict deadlines… and security is rarely high on the list of concerns with so much else at stake.

Security is seen as the domain of the AppSec team, who have the unenviable task of scanning code (or worse: reviewing it manually, line-by-line) and reporting to the development team that their code is insecure or indeed, entirely unusable. They’re the sticks in the mud that pick apart their good work, halt innovation and generally create a headache for developers. At the end of the day, many security issues are quite a simple fix – perhaps just one line of code could reinforce a vulnerable back door in minutes.

But, here’s the problem. With ‘security’ so synonymous with a negative experience, developers simply aren’t engaged with it as closely as they should be. Those one-line fixes aren’t happening: after all, the AppSec guys continually come across the same issues. It must be quite maddening for them to still be pointing out SQL injection flaws, more than twenty years after we first discovered them (and their subsequent fix).

What we’ve done to date isn’t working anywhere near as effectively as we’d hoped. We need to focus on repairing the bridge between developers and AppSec specialists, striving for a positive security culture in which developers are given the tools and training to make a real impact in the space.

Who knows? They might even fall in love with it as I did!

Positive security is the fastest and easiest way to improve application security

My talk at DevSecCon this year will show you why there’s so much power in positivity – and no, it’s not some woo-woo about intangible outcomes. It is an absolutely vital ingredient in the secure coding recipe of success.

Developers hold the key to improving security from the very beginning of production, by writing secure code in the first place. By creating a positive security culture and getting developers excited about application security, common vulnerabilities can be wiped out before they ever make it to a scan or manual code review in AppSec land.

It’s thirty times more expensive to fix vulnerabilities in code that is already committed, so finding training that plays to developer strengths, holds interest and actually works is a huge step in future cost reduction for identifying and fixing those recurring vulnerabilities.

Positive, developer focused initiatives foster the right security culture.

When everyone is on the same page with security best practice, a positive security culture is a happy, vital by-product.

Positive, scalable developer focused initiatives foster the right security culture. Engaging the problem-solving, creative minds of developers is essential to winning them over, as well as ensuring any new recruits can quickly come up-to-speed with the security expectations of the team. My talk will give you an overview of how the developer security relationship has evolved and ideas on rolling out a successful security awareness program in your own organizations.

Be sure to come along and learn how to shift left with the positive approach you never knew you needed.

Where: DevSecCon Singapore

When: Feb 28 – Mar 1

Who: Secure Code Warrior’s Jaap Karan Singh, ‘Why Positive Security is the Next Game-Changer’.

Jaap Karan Singh

Co-Founder and Chief Singh at Secure Code Warrior

About Jaap Karan Singh

Jaap Karan Singh is the Co-Founder and Chief Singh of Secure Code Warrior, a global security company that makes software development better and more secure. After security testing at BAE Systems in Australia, Jaap moved from hacking web applications to educating developers on how to protect their own applications. Jaap has delivered training on web application security concepts and run workshops at Australian financial and telecommunications organisations in Australia. He specialises in Javascript technologies such as HTML5, Node, Express and Mongo. He recently created and delivered a course on hacking and protecting modern Javascript applications at OWASP AppSec EU 2016.

Tags:

Application Security
AppSec
Security
Security Transformation
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