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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 S3 , 2 weeks, 6 days ago.
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@derynleigh started using tool Amazon ELB , 2 weeks, 6 days ago.
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@derynleigh started using tool Amazon EC2 , 2 weeks, 6 days ago.
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@derynleigh started using tool Amazon Cloudfront , 2 weeks, 6 days ago.
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@derynleigh started using tool Akamai , 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  

Snapper is a command-line tool developed by SUSE for managing filesystem snapshots. It allows users to create, delete, compare, and restore snapshots of their system or data. A snapshot is a read-only point-in-time copy of a filesystem, useful for recovering from system changes or errors. Snapper integrates deeply with the SUSE ecosystem and works primarily with Btrfs, though it also supports LVM with thin provisioning. It can automatically take snapshots before and after software updates or system modifications, helping users track what changed and roll back if necessary. By using pre and post snapshots, Snapper provides a simple way to undo changes or restore files without requiring full system backups. It also supports automatic cleanup routines to manage disk space efficiently. In practice, Snapper serves as both a safety net and a diagnostic tool, making it easier to maintain system stability and recover quickly from mistakes or failed updates.