Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Word of the Day: SecOps

Word of the Day WhatIs.com
Daily updates on the latest technology terms | August 7, 2019
SecOps

SecOps is a management approach that connects security and operations teams, similar to how DevOps unifies software developers and operations professionals. The premise behind SecOps is to ensure that security and operations teams share accountability, processes, tools and information to make sure the organization does not not have to sacrifice security for higher uptime and better performance. Keeping both teams involved in the process provides greater visibility into what changes are required and what the impact of those changes on other parts of the business might be.

The process of merging security with operations involves several steps. The first is to consolidate priorities and decision making processes. Next, communication channels, software tools and authorizations to information need to become shared in order to give every team member a uniform, holistic view of development. Lastly, all development processes need to be updated to incorporate security at each stage.

The most critical difference between SecOps and alternative management methodologies is that security is included in the responsibility of all team members and in every aspect of the organization. For example, a customer service agent may notice a suspicious email notification or an engineer could report a SQL injection attempt.

As information security teams play a more crucial role in organizations, SecOps is important in making sure the gap between security and operations does not cause company-wide issues. The collaboration of security teams with operations teams helps organizations reduce process inefficiencies, become more secure overall and share accountability.

Goals of SecOps

Goals of a successful SecOps approach revolve around introducing security aspects earlier or at every stage of the development cycle. Emphasis is placed on upper management to commit to making security improvements, in order to implement a more holistic roadmap. Objectives can also include cross-team collaboration and cross-functional review of operational risks.

SecOps may be a cultural change for some organizations that requires larger issues to be addressed before goals can be achieved. In this situation, objectives may include redefining job roles and priorities, outlining business risks associated with security incidents and agreeing on core business functions.

Benefits

Implementing a SecOps approach is associated with the following benefits:

  • Higher return on investment (ROI).
  • Improved productivity.
  • More efficient use of shared resources.
  • Fewer application or service disruptions.
  • More streamlined security audit
  • Greater visibility of security vulnerabilities across the organization.
  • Easier adoption of technologies that require advanced security measures, such as cloud services.
  • Stronger incident management and response
  • More effective patch
  • Fewer compliance

DevSecOps

A term related to SecOps is DevSecOps, a process that layers security practices between development and operations. Although the term DevSecOps is relatively new, the idea of addressing security at each stage of the software lifecycle has been around for years. DevSecOps often focuses on an Agile approach to development, which is aimed at speed and efficiency. Teams are working together increasingly to ensure that security stays on par with development and operations.

Quote of the Day

 
"To help transition to a DevSecOps model to protect enterprises, security teams need to identify key stakeholders, provide examples of specific company security events and work toward creating crossover teams." - Michael Cobb

Learning Center

 

How to start building a DevSecOps model
To successfully transition to a DevSecOps model that bakes security into software from the beginning, CISOs and security teams need to sell key stakeholders on business-specific needs for the cultural change, identify security events in their areas of responsibility and create a pilot program to ease the transition.

Boost application security in DevOps with DevSecOps
Application security in DevOps needs to be top priority during the development stage. Software developers can improve their products by shifting security to the left.

DevSecOps shift begins, but remains a work in progress
DevSecOps -- a philosophy in which security is deeply embedded into application delivery, from business requirements to production delivery -- is still subject to debate about its long-term direction and feasibility.

Build up a DevSecOps pipeline for fast and safe code delivery
Containers and CI/CD promise to get code developments onto live servers quickly with automated steps. But there's no sense rushing out compromised and vulnerable builds. These practical security additions create a DevSecOps pipeline with all the speed and less worry.

Use the right DevSecOps tools for more secure development
More than 75% of applications have security vulnerabilities. Here's how DevSecOps tools and a culture change can make software safer.

Quiz Yourself

 
Successfully _______ a DevOps culture in a data center isn't easy, but it brings great rewards.
A. adapting
B. adopting

Answer

Stay in Touch

 
For feedback about any of our definitions or to suggest a new definition, please contact me at: mrouse@techtarget.com

Visit the Word of the Day Archives and catch up on what you've missed!

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