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Application Security covers flaws in software and services that attackers can exploit to steal data, disrupt systems, or gain access.

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Application security is the practice of protecting software and its data throughout design, development, deployment, and maintenance. It covers applications such as web and mobile services, APIs, and the libraries and cloud configurations they depend on. Typical weaknesses include injection, broken access controls, insecure authentication, exposed secrets, unsafe deserialization, and vulnerable third-party components.

These flaws can let an attacker read or alter data, impersonate users, execute unauthorized actions, or gain a foothold in connected systems. Effective defenses include threat modeling and secure coding, peer review, automated testing, dependency and secret scanning, timely vulnerability remediation, and penetration testing for higher-risk functions. Controls must continue after release: logging and application-layer monitoring can help detect abuse, while well-tested access controls, safe configuration, and an incident-response plan limit and investigate exploitation. Vulnerability management should prioritize issues by exploitability, exposure, affected data, and the privileges available through the application.

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Traditional application security practices are not effective in the modern DevOps world. When security scans are run only at the end of the software delivery lifecycle (either right before or after a service is deployed), the ensuing process of compiling and fixing vulnerabilities creates massive overhead for developers. The overhead that degrades velocity and puts production deadlines at risk.