SPaMCAST 631 - Hackable and Ethical Hackers, A Conversation with Ted Harrington

Published: Dec. 27, 2020, 10 p.m.

b'This week\\u2019s Software Process and Measurement Cast features our interview with Ted Harrington, author of HACKABLE: How to Do Application Security Right. Application security requires planning, coding, and testing. It is not something that you can easily remedy after the fact - it needs to be part of the conversation before you write one line of code. Ted provides insights for developers, C-level executives, and product owners. If you have not bought a copy (), one for you and one for your boss, and listen to the interview together. Ted\\u2019s Bio Ted Harrington is the author of HACKABLE: How to Do Application Security Right and the Executive Partner at Independent Security Evaluators (ISE), the company of ethical hackers famous for hacking cars, medical devices, and password managers. He\\u2019s helped hundreds of companies fix tens of thousands of security vulnerabilities, including\\xa0 Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Netflix, and more. For his stewardship of security research that Wired Magazine says \\u201cwins the prize, hands down,\\u201d Ted has been named both Executive of the Year by the American Business Awards and an SD Metro 40 Under 40 entrepreneur. He leads a team that started and organizes IoT Village, an event whose hacking contest is a three-time DEFCON Black Badge winner, representing the discovery of more than 300 zero-day vulnerabilities (and counting).\\xa0 Re-Read Saturday News\\xa0 This week we are talking a break from re-reading by Jeff Dalton. I spent way too much time on Zoom calls enjoying physically distant holidays with family and friends.\\xa0\\xa0 This week\\u2019s installment can be found at www.tomcagley.com/blog Previous installments: Week 1: - \\xa0 Week 2: - Week 3: - \\xa0 Week 4: - \\xa0 Next SPaMCAST The next Software Process and Measurement Cast reprises a panel from the 18th of March 2020 just as things were getting interesting to discuss what they have learned working and supporting remote teams versus how supposed it would all work. The panel was comprised of: Jeff Dalton jeff@broadswordsolutions.com\\xa0 Amy McDonough Amy.McDonough@spr.com\\xa0 Sandeep Koorse Sandeep@koorse.com\\xa0 Christopher Hurney\\xa0 \\xa0 Christopherhurney@gmail.com And myself! tcagley@tomcagley.com'