Mend.io Launches Inaugural Open Source Reliability Leaderboard
New report offers valuable resource to help organizations evaluate the safety and reliability of open-source packages.
Open-source software enables code review and reuse, but known vulnerabilities and unmaintained dependencies can create cybersecurity risks.
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Background for this topic.
Open source is software whose source code is available under a license that permits use, inspection, modification, and redistribution. It may be developed by a community, an organization, or a small group of maintainers; “open” does not guarantee that the code is actively reviewed, supported, or secure.
For security teams, the main concerns are vulnerabilities in dependencies and the software supply chain: a maintainer account, release process, or package can be compromised, while an unmaintained component may retain known flaws. Public code can enable review and faster fixes, but visibility alone is not a control. Maintain an inventory or SBOM of open-source components, pin and verify versions or signatures where possible, monitor vulnerability advisories, and apply updates through a controlled process.
New report offers valuable resource to help organizations evaluate the safety and reliability of open-source packages.
New LLM-based projects typically become successful in a short period of time, but the security posture of these generative AI projects are very low, making them extremely unsafe to use.
The new FDA software bill of materials (SBOM) guidelines for medical devices could have broad impact on the healthcare industry and the broader open source ecosystem.