DevOps Tuesday Lunch - DevSecOps: like DevOps without the annoyed security team
Details
This is the start of a series of meetups this May, which we've chosen to call "DevOps Tuesday Lunch". If successful we might look at making this a regular thing, your participation and feedback are essential here.
This is a free virtual event open for everyone held using Microsoft Teams, so you can safely join and participate from wherever you are, for some knowledge, discussions, or just lurk in the background for a little company during lunch.
Events aren't recorded so you have to be "there", but it also makes it a safe place where no question is too silly to ask, and hopefully we can give you a little of the meetup feeling even though it's virtual.
Our first session will be around DevSecOps, hope to see you there!
DevSecOps: like DevOps without the annoyed security team
Integrating security controls into DevOps has been the goal, and downfall, of many software teams. While the two pursuits often run counter to each other, there's plenty of ways to use the tools, processes, and platforms your team is already using to improve the security of your products.
In this talk, we'll be exploring ways you can integrate and improve security controls in your software at every stage of the DevOps lifecycle. In particular, we'll be looking for all the ways you can use your existing tools and processes to improve the security of products and platforms without derailing your team's delivery or giving your security ops team any more sleepless nights than necessary.
Alistair Chapman
Alistair Chapman is an Australian cloud security engineer and open-source .NET developer. He’s currently working at Red Hat, after years spent doing everything from network engineering to DevOps consulting, governance research to embedded development. Alistair's passions are cloud security architecture, cross-platform .NET and container orchestration. When not at work, Alistair is also active in the .NET open-source community including maintaining Cake (a .NET Foundation project), and is a strong supporter of sustainable open-source development.
