SiliconANGLE reports that technology firm Dynatrace unveiled enhancements for its Application Security Module, which was released last December.
Updates include the extension of automatic software vulnerability detection in Kubernetes-managed environments and machine learning-based risk assessments for applications that run on the runtime environment Node.js. Dynatrace’s Application Security Module provides users with real-time, continuous runtime application self-protection capabilities for cloud-native applications in pre-production and production stages, the company said.
Dynatrace also announced that its core Software Intelligence Platform now has a Cloud Automation Module, which can be used to arrange the application development lifecycle process. This module provides automated quality checking of pre-production applications by using automation and artificial intelligence principles. It also includes a version comparison feature that would allow the automatic restoration of the most stable version and assess the performance of individual release versions if problems arise.
Both the Application Security Module and the Cloud Automation Module will be out in the market within 90 days.
Jill Aitoro leads editorial for SC Media, and content strategy for parent company CyberRisk Alliance. She 20 years of experience editing and reporting on technology, business and policy.
Washington, D.C.'s Department of Insurance, Securities and Banking has disclosed that 800GB of data claimed to have been stolen by the LockBit ransomware operation was obtained from an attack against third-party software provider Tyler Technologies following the ransomware gang's threats to expose 1GB of the exfiltrated data to coerce the agency into providing the demanded ransom, reports The Record, a news site by cybersecurity firm Recorded Future.
Organizations could have their sensitive information compromised through a high-severity vulnerability in Google Cloud, Azure, and Amazon Web Services command line interface tools dubbed "LeakyCLI", The Hacker News reports.