Cordyceps flaw pattern is more proof CI/CD is part of the attack surface

On June 24, research from Novee Security was released, reporting a CI/CD weakness that could enable anyone with an unauthenticated The post Cordyceps flaw pattern is more proof CI/CD is part of the attack surface appeared first on The New Stack .
The increasing integration and automation of CI/CD pipelines are expanding the attack surface, making these systems prime targets for sophisticated vulnerabilities.
This highlights a critical security gap in development workflows that, if exploited, could compromise entire software supply chains and intellectual property.
CI/CD security is shifting from an optional best practice to a fundamental requirement, demanding greater investment in hardening and continuous monitoring.
- · Cybersecurity firms specializing in supply chain security
- · DevSecOps tool vendors
- · Organizations with robust internal security teams
- · Organizations with immature CI/CD security practices
- · Legacy software development firms
- · Developers lacking security awareness
Increased focus and investment in CI/CD security tools and practices across enterprises.
Potential for new regulations or industry standards mandating secure CI/CD pipelines.
A shift in developer training and culture to embed security thinking from the earliest stages of software development.
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