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Latest coverage for Library

Library security covers flaws in shared code components, dependency risks, and patching practices that can expose applications and their users.

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Background for this topic.

A library is a packaged collection of reusable code that an application incorporates rather than implementing itself. Libraries may be maintained internally, obtained from public repositories, or included indirectly through other dependencies. Their security properties therefore become part of the application’s attack surface, often without developers reviewing every function.

Security concerns include vulnerabilities in library code, unsafe defaults, malicious or tampered packages, and abandoned versions that no longer receive fixes. A vulnerable dependency may be exploitable only under specific conditions, so risk assessment should consider the affected code path and exposure rather than version numbers alone. Useful controls include pinning and reviewing dependency versions, verifying package provenance and integrity, tracking direct and transitive dependencies in an inventory such as an SBOM, scanning for known vulnerabilities, and testing updates before deployment. When a flaw is disclosed, maintainers need a process to identify affected applications, apply a compatible update or mitigation, and remove unsupported libraries.

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The Hacker News 3 years, 7 months ago

The Value of Old Systems

Old technology solutions – every organization has a few of them tucked away somewhere.  It could be an old and unsupported storage system or a tape library holding the still-functional backups from over 10 years ago.  This is a common scenario with software too. For example, consider an accounting software suite that was extremely expensive when it was purchased. If the vendor eventually went

The Hacker News 3 years, 7 months ago

The Value of Old Systems

Old technology solutions – every organization has a few of them tucked away somewhere.  It could be an old and unsupported storage system or a tape library holding the still-functional backups from over 10 years ago.  This is a common scenario with software too. For example, consider an accounting software suite that was extremely expensive when it was purchased. If the vendor eventually went