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@derynleigh started using tool OWASP Dependency-Check , 2 weeks, 6 days ago.
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@derynleigh started using tool Amazon ELB , 2 weeks, 6 days ago.
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@laura_garcia shared a post, 2 weeks, 6 days ago
Software Developer, RELIANOID

🔐 RELIANOID & NIST Cybersecurity Framework Alignment

At RELIANOID, security is built into both our Load Balancer and our internal operations. We align our product and organizational practices with the NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) across its five core functions: Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond, and Recover. ✔️ Consistent security controls acro..

NIST Cybersecurity Framework RELIANOID compliance
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@varbear shared a link, 2 weeks, 6 days ago
FAUN.dev()

Goodbye Microservices

Twilio Segment collapsed 140+ destination-specific microservices into asingle monolith, one repo, one set of dependencies, one test harness. They leveled out version sprawl and builtTraffic Recorder, a homegrown yakbak-based HTTP playback tool. That killed off hours-long test runs, dropping them to.. read more  

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@varbear shared a link, 2 weeks, 6 days ago
FAUN.dev()

Why I Didn’t Sign the Resonant Computing Manifesto: The Foundations Need Work

A sharp critique of theResonant Computing Manifestopushes it past vague ideals. It calls for real governance scaffolding, not just poetic prose. Without that? The manifesto risks becoming just another glossy PDF for entrenched players to wave around while changing nothing. Under the hood:What’s real.. read more  

Why I Didn’t Sign the Resonant Computing Manifesto: The Foundations Need Work
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@varbear shared a link, 2 weeks, 6 days ago
FAUN.dev()

Rust unit testing: file writing

To test file writes without hitting the disk, the author swaps in a closure that takes a file handle. That handle’s a test double, so after the code runs, you can crack it open and inspect what got written... read more  

IncusOS, released is a lightweight Linux distribution built on Debian 13 with a focus on security, reliability, and reproducibility. It implements atomic A/B updates for safe rollbacks, UEFI Secure Boot, TPM 2.0 integration, and full-disk encryption to ensure a trusted boot process and data protection.

The system departs from traditional management models by eliminating shell access entirely. Administration occurs exclusively through authenticated APIs using TLS client certificates or OIDC. This design enforces consistency and limits attack surfaces across server fleets and virtualized environments.

IncusOS supports an online image customizer and a fully automated installation process, applying configuration at first boot. Hardware requirements align with modern systems such as Windows 11. Future updates will deliver new kernel versions, expanded configuration options, and integrations with tools like Linstor and Netbird.

By standardizing deployment and management through uniform images, IncusOS simplifies auditing, maintenance, and support for organizations operating large or distributed infrastructures.