Application Security Weekly (Video)

Mike Shema

About all things AppSec, DevOps, and DevSecOps. Hosted by Mike Shema and John Kinsella, the podcast focuses on helping its audience find and fix software flaws effectively.

  1. AppSec Conversations on Agents, LLMs, and OWASP from RSAC - Scott Clinton, Janet Worthington, Merritt Maxim - ASW #384

    قبل ١٠ ساعات ·  فيديو

    AppSec Conversations on Agents, LLMs, and OWASP from RSAC - Scott Clinton, Janet Worthington, Merritt Maxim - ASW #384

    We showcase recordings from this year's RSAC. At RSAC Conference 2026, Scott Clinton, Co-Chair and co-founder of the OWASP GenAI Security Project, shares insights from the project's latest research, including new landscape guides and evolving approaches to securing generative and agentic AI systems. The conversation explores critical gaps in GenAI data security, the rise of AI-assisted development, and the immense growth of the OWASP community and sponsor ecosystem. Looking ahead, he outlines the most urgent risks and priorities shaping AI and agentic security in 2026. Then Merritt Maxim discusses how AI is affecting Identity and Access Management. Expect to hear this topic a lot throughout 2026, especially as the industry tries to figure out what's different or special about securing agent identities. We close with a chat with Janet Worthington about the impact of agents on the SDLC and how orgs are updating their controls to deal with code generated by humans and LLMs alike. Segment Resources: https://genai.owasp.org https://genai.owasp.org/resources/ https://www.scworld.com/podcast-episode/3905-keeping-up-with-the-owasp-genai-project-scott-clinton-asw-381 This segment is sponsored by The OWASP GenAI Security Project. Visit https://securityweekly.com/owasp to learn more about them! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-384

    ١ س
  2. The Human Aspect of Red Teams - Brian Fox, Tom Tovar, T. Gwyddon 'Data' Owen - ASW #379

    ٢١ أبريل ·  فيديو

    The Human Aspect of Red Teams - Brian Fox, Tom Tovar, T. Gwyddon 'Data' Owen - ASW #379

    Red team exercises set goals to see if a particular outcome can be accomplished through a simulated attack, but the ultimate outcome should be educating the org about how to improve tools and processes that make attacks more difficult to succeed. Gwyddon "Data" Owen shares his experience building a red team, creating an exercise, and leveraging the results to improve security. And while the adoption of LLMs will accelerate a red team's activities, there are still plenty of foundational security controls that orgs can establish that would require a red team to be more than just fast, but fast and very careful. Coding Agents Are Getting More Cautious, But Not Safer A new study finds that while frontier AI coding models are hallucinating less than they did a year ago, they still preserve a significant amount of avoidable software risk when left ungrounded. Sonatype's research shows that connecting these models to real-time software intelligence dramatically improves remediation quality and reduces critical and high-severity vulnerability exposure by 60–70%. The takeaway is clear: safer AI-assisted development will depend not just on better models, but on grounding them in accurate, current dependency and vulnerability data. This segment is sponsored by Sonatype. Read the study: https://securityweekly.com/sonatypersac How We Achieve Agentic Outcomes in CyberSecurity: The "Do-It-For-Me" Mobile Defense If you look at deepfakes, synthetic identity, social engineering, and new malware variants coming to market, it seems like attackers have a first-mover advantage in using AI. The volume and variety of threats are growing faster than the current cyber stack can address. Against this backdrop, organizations are moving away from "do-it-yourself" delivery models (more tools, more alerts, more headcount) to "do-it-for-me" agentic AI delivery models (using platforms that unify data, execute policy, and automate outcomes). The emphasis outside of cyber is on empowering the expert human-in-the-loop — so teams spend less time in the noise and more time delivering business outcomes. This segment explores how cybersecurity leaders can make the most of the AI Age, leveraging it for good while staying relevant amid the explosive AI adoption curve. This segment is sponsored by Appdome. Visit https://securityweekly.com/appdomersac to learn more about them! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-379

    ١ س ١٣ د
  3. Securing Software's Journey with the OWASP SPVS - Cameron W., Farshad Abasi, Rohan Ravindranath, Ido Geffen - ASW #378

    ١٤ أبريل ·  فيديو

    Securing Software's Journey with the OWASP SPVS - Cameron W., Farshad Abasi, Rohan Ravindranath, Ido Geffen - ASW #378

    It's one thing to write secure code, it's another to release it into the wild. That code needs to be designed, built, tested, released, and maintained. Farshad Abasi and Cameron Walters explain how the OWASP Secure Pipeline Verification Standard picks up from where ASVS left off, how it complements other supply chain security efforts like SLSA, and why they updated it with explicit coverage for AI. They show what goes into making a project relevant and -- most importantly -- successful at defending how supply chains are attacked. They're also looking for more feedback and participation! If you build software packages, consume software packages, or have an interest in helping organizations stay secure, check it out! Resources https://owasp.org/www-project-spvs/ https://github.com/OWASP/www-project-spvs/blob/main/1.5/ReleaseNotesOWASPSPVS1.5-AI-Pipeline-Security.md https://youtu.be/-WoqGDdivGw?si=kK5-csbnTw8Y4g2J -- The Story Behind OWASP SPVS https://slsa.dev Zero Trust That Actually Ships: Moving From Strategy Decks to Real Security Most enterprise organizations have been working at Zero Trust for years and fail to deliver truly secure environments. Rohan Ravindranath shares insights that Zappsec has gained from guiding the global teams that are succeeding at protecting their orgs. Discover the common pitfalls so you can deploy a solution that works. This segment is sponsored by Zappsec. Visit https://securityweekly.com/zappsecrsac to learn more about them! Cloning Attacker Tradecraft: Why AI Pentesting is Becoming Essential Enterprises ship code continuously, but most security validation still happens in snapshots. Novee CEO and co-founder Ido Geffen explains what "AI penetration testing" means, why it's different from automated scanning, and why it's becoming essential as attackers adopt AI to move faster. He breaks down what separates best-in-class AI pentesting: operator-like reasoning across real environments, validated exploitability, and the ability to uncover business logic flaws and multi-step attack chains. Ido covers the technology behind Novee's AI penetration tester: a proprietary LLM model, built independently of "frontier" LLMs (like Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, etc.), and consistently outperforming them at browser exploitation tests. Finally, he shares what buyers should demand in a live evaluation and how continuous retesting closes the loop after fixes ship. This segment is sponsored by Novee Security. See what your attackers already know at https://securityweekly.com/noveersac. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-378

    ١ س ١٠ د
  4. AppSec News Roundup on Claude Code Leak, Axios NPM Compromise, Secure Design - Idan Plotnik, Raj Mallempati - ASW #377

    ٧ أبريل ·  فيديو

    AppSec News Roundup on Claude Code Leak, Axios NPM Compromise, Secure Design - Idan Plotnik, Raj Mallempati - ASW #377

    Security problems aren't changing very much even though security teams are. We catch up on the implications of the Claude Code source leak, the very human lessons from the axios NPM compromise, and what secure design looks like when it involves agents, humans, or both. AppSec has always celebrated interesting and impactful vulns. And LLMs are now a favored tool for finding flaws. We shouldn't forget the success and effectiveness of fuzzers like OSS-Fuzz, which has improved security for over 1,000 projects and found over 50,000 bugs. But we can't ignore the ease of prompting an agent to go find -- and exploit -- a vuln when the UX and overhead of doing so is hardly more than writing some markdown. The SDLC Blind Spot: Why Breaches Start with Identity, Not Code Developers have access to source code, CI/CD pipelines, and cloud infrastructure — and attackers know it. Target lost 860GB of source code through a single compromised credential. Recruitment fraud campaigns have pivoted from a compromised developer to cloud admin in under 10 minutes. As agents join human developers, contractors, and service accounts in the SDLC, the attack surface is expanding faster than static security tools can track. Security teams need real-time visibility beyond code and into who has access and what they're actually doing. This segment is sponsored by Apiiro. To lean more, visit https://securityweekly.com/apiirorsac. How AI-Driven Development is Reshaping the Application Risk Landscape Agent coding assistants are accelerating software development, generating more code and more change than security teams were built to handle. In this interview, Idan Plotnik discusses how AI-driven development is reshaping the application risk landscape and why traditional vulnerability management models can't keep up. Make sure to schedule a free SDLC Risk Assessment with BlueFlag Security - 30 minutes to deploy. 48 hours to results. Please visit https://securityweekly.com/blueflagrsac. Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-377

    ١ س ٩ د

التقييمات والمراجعات

٤٫٨
من ٥
‫٤ من التقييمات‬

حول

About all things AppSec, DevOps, and DevSecOps. Hosted by Mike Shema and John Kinsella, the podcast focuses on helping its audience find and fix software flaws effectively.

قد يعجبك أيضًا