Arnica integrates across your software supply chain stack and provides necessary context and actionability to proactively mitigate supply chain risk.
Robust source code security and code quality scanning tooling with static application security testing (SAST) and software composition analysis (SCA).
Dynamic policy driven permissions management that eliminates excessive permissions and provides developers with easy self-service tooling.
Locate and correct misconfigured branch security policies and CODEOWNERS files.
Zero new hardcoded secrets added to source code. Detected secrets get fixed automatically in real time or with one-click mitigation by the developer, eliminating the secret and its history entirely.
Identify anomalous behavior and inject policy driven authentication of developers and the code they write.
With Arnica's pipelineless approach, security teams can:
โขย Easily establish and maintain 100% security scanning across the software supply chain from day one
โขย Run security workflows earlier and more often without requiring any code changes in the CI/CD pipeline
โขย Send targeted alerting to the person/team with a personalized context and ability to easily fix an identified risk
โขย Empowers the recipient of the alert to be able to fix the risk with a single click or automated policy
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Based on our record, HackerOne seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 17 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Mozilla has a great security team and they have recently moved to HackerOne https://hackerone.com/. I don't understand where you get the basis for saying that mozilla employees don't work on weekends. Any facts or substantiation or just speculation? Source: over 2 years ago
You pick a target, for example hackerone.com. Source: over 2 years ago
There are many resources online nowadays to learn security. You can do challenges on https://root-me.org, https://www.hackthebox.com/, https://overthewire.org/wargames/, etc. You can participate in security competitions (CTFs), see https://ctftime.org for a list of upcoming events. And finally if you are more interested in web security you can look for bugs on websites and get paid for it by https://hackerone.com... Source: over 2 years ago
Do Bug bounty on https://hackerone.com. You'll get paid if you really know how to hack and write a report.alot oh cash rains in the thousands if you can pwn a computer that is in scope .plus its legal as long as you stay in scope. Source: over 2 years ago
Depending on what type of cybersecurity you want to do, there's other ways to set yourself apart as well. Another way I'd get confidence in someone's abilities is if they've made bug bounties on bugcrowd.com or hackerone.com, for example. Even then, at big companies those people still have to go through HR just like everybody else. Source: about 3 years ago
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