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.
Distributed Artificial Intelligence in Space
Verifying Distributed Adaptive Real-Time Systems
10 At-Risk Emerging Technologies
Technical Debt as a Core Software Engineering Practice
DNS Best Practices
Three Roles and Three Failure Patterns of Software Architects
Security Modeling Tools
Best Practices for Preventing and Responding to Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Attacks
Cyber Security Engineering for Software and Systems Assurance
Moving Target Defense
Improving Cybersecurity Through Cyber Intelligence
A Requirement Specification Language for AADL
Becoming a CISO: Formal and Informal Requirements
Predicting Quality Assurance with Software Metrics and Security Methods
Network Flow and Beyond
A Community College Curriculum for Secure Software Development
Security and the Internet of Things
The SEI Fellow Series: Nancy Mead
An Open Source Tool for Fault Tree Analysis
Global Value Chain – An Expanded View of the ICT Supply Chain
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