With the increasing complexity of software systems, the use of third-party components has become a widespread practice. Cyber disruptions, such as SolarWinds and Log4j, demonstrate the harm that can occur when organizations fail to manage third-party components in their software systems. In this podcast from the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute, Carol Woody, principal researcher, and Michael Bandor, a senior software engineer, discuss a Software Bill of Materials (SBOMs) framework to help promote the use of SBOMs and establish a more comprehensive set of practices and processes that organizations can leverage as they build their programs. They also offer guidance for government agencies who are interested in incorporating SBOMs into their work.
My Story in Computing with Sam Procter
The Importance of Diversity in Cybersecurity: Carol Ware
The Importance of Diversity in Software Engineering: Suzanne Miller
The Importance of Diversity in Artificial Intelligence: Violet Turri
Using Large Language Models in the National Security Realm
Atypical Applications of Agile and DevSecOps Principles
When Agile and Earned Value Management Collide: 7 Considerations for Successful Interaction
The Impact of Architecture on Cyber-Physical Systems Safety
ChatGPT and the Evolution of Large Language Models: A Deep Dive into 4 Transformative Case Studies
The Cybersecurity of Quantum Computing: 6 Areas of Research
User-Centric Metrics for Agile
The Product Manager’s Evolving Role in Software and Systems Development
Measuring the Trustworthiness of AI Systems
Actionable Data in the DevSecOps Pipeline
Insider Risk Management in the Post-Pandemic Workplace
An Agile Approach to Independent Verification and Validation
Zero Trust Architecture: Best Practices Observed in Industry
Automating Infrastructure as Code with Ansible and Molecule
Identifying and Preventing the Next SolarWinds
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