OSS Leftovers
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Google Announces 'Fuzz Testing' Project For Open Source Software
Google announced "OSS-Fuzz," a beta project that open source software projects can join to do "fuzz testing." Fuzz testing, or "fuzzing," is an automated testing technique that can uncover memory corruption bugs in software by generating random inputs to a given program.
The program, developed in conjunction with the "Core Infrastructure Initiative" community over the past few years, specifically targets open source projects that have a "large user base" and/or are "critical to Global IT infrastructure."
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Google Rolls Out OSS-Fuzz To Help Improve Open-Source Software Safety
Google today is rolling out a public beta of OSS-Fuzz, their new program to provide continuous fuzzing of core open-source software code-bases.
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How to care for the community over the code
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How Open Source Software Could Level The Playing Field in Finance
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MapR Expands Big Data Innovations with New MapR Ecosystem Pack
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MapR Boosts Big Data Streaming in Open Source Ecosystem Pack
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Amazon Brings On a New Open Source Guru
Amazon Web Services has named Zaheda Bhorat, a booster of open source software with stints at Salesforce, Google and the U.K. Government Digital Service under her belt, to lead its open source strategy effort.
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AWS re:Invent Conference Shifts Focus From VMs To Containers and Serverless Computing
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AWS open-sources Blox container management tools
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Docker for AWS: Who's it really for?
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AWS Batch simplifies batch computing in the cloud
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AWS introduces open source Blox container management tools
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AWS launches Blox, a collection of open source tools for the EC2 Container Service
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How to Stop Worrying and Start Using Open Source Software
Open source software advantages are numerous: the product is being constantly improved by thousands of developers all across the world, a business owner can clearly see “what’s in the trunk” and adapt the product to his or her eCommerce store needs anytime.
Nevertheless, for those who consider eCommerce systems to be just a tool for selling their goods or services, open source products can be still suspicious. Read on to see how we dispel doubts about open source by examining concerns related to it.
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Geohot open-sources his semi-autonomous car technology
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George ‘geohot’ Hotz on his new open-source autonomous car platform: Tesla is iOS, we want to be Android
In order to circumvent the regulations imposed by NHTSA on his aftermarket driver assist device, the ‘comma one’, George ‘geohot’ Hotz announced that his startup is releasing a new version of the product, ‘comma neo’ (an anagram for one), for free as an open-source platform.
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Node.js Foundation Adds Security Project
The Node.js Foundation is set to oversee the Node.js Security Project in an effort to consolidate and improve security for the popular open-source application programming framework.
In a move that aims to help improve security vulnerability disclosure, the Node.js Security Project announced on November 30 that it is now officially becoming part of the Node.js Foundation. The move will help to improve the security of the open-source Node.js development framework and its modules, which are widely used in modern applications.
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Atlassian: “DevOps is the new normal”
“DevOps isn’t any single person’s job — it’s everyone’s job.” What does DevOps mean for Atlassian and what shapes the company culture? How do departments support DevOps and what are the usual DevOps aspects that aren’t part of the company values? We invited Ian Buchanan, Developer Advocate, Integration Specialist for Atlassian’s DevOps Ecosystem to weigh in on Atlassian’s road to DevOps and to debunk some of the myths surrounding this movement.
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Monitoring Software: The Market Lines Are Blurry
Who is the market leader in IT monitoring? You won’t find the answer to that question in this article.
With a wide range of functionality being offered for multiple audiences, our priority is to provide clarity about who wants what. The New Stack is seeing two contradictory patterns. Many companies are trying to create a full stack of monitoring services, but there is also a desire to have a composable infrastructure.
We believe these trends will continue. The lines between infrastructure and application monitoring will continue to blur, but task-specific tools will gain prominence. Perhaps the biggest factor in how these changes unfold is the job roles of the people using the monitoring software.
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