Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

GitGuardian

How We Built a Supply Chain Security Watchtower: Meet SaaS-Sentinel

SaaS-Sentinel is a free monitoring platform that notifies users when their favorite tool might be under attack, helping them stay on top of supply chain risks. Here is the full story of this innovative project that seeks to democratize the use of honeytokens. Join the adventure today!

Are you worried about the security of your software supply chain?

GitGuardian Honeytoken has got you covered. You can deploy honeytokens at scale, monitor for unauthorized use, and detect intrusions in your supply chain before they can cause any damage to your assets. Honeytokens are unique, decoy credentials that can be placed across your software delivery pipeline, giving you the ability to track unauthorized access attempts in real time. They allow you to monitor when, where, and how attackers are trying to access your assets. This way, you can take proactive measures to prevent attacks before they happen.

Introducing GitGuardian Honeytoken

We are proud to introduce you to the GitGuardian Honeytoken module. Honeytokens are decoy credentials that don't allow any real access but instead trigger alerts that reveal the IP address of whoever tried to use them. GitGuardian honeytokens can be used for intrusion detection in your own environments and tools. You can also plant our honeytokens in your SaaS vendors' systems to be alerted if a core vendor in the supply chain has been compromised. Placing honeytokens in your source code help you detect when your code has been leaked publicly, indicating a code leak.

Supply Chain Security: Secrets and Modern Security Frameworks (Part III)

In this final part, we'll discuss more software supply chain security frameworks and the critical role of secrets detection in them. We'll explore the NIST SSDF, SLSA, and OSC&R frameworks and how they cover the topic of secrets in software supply chain security.

The Lemontech story - GitGuardian customer stories

A few weeks ago, we had the pleasure of exchanging with Ezequiel Rabinovich, Lemontech's CTO, about how his teams use GitGuardian to protect their repositories. Lemontech is a company developing software for the legal industry based in Santiago, Chile. It serves more than 1,300 customers in Latin America. Ezequiel supervises a team of about 30 developers and 4 DevOps engineers for approximately 150 employees. They use GitHub for source control management, and their organization has 350 repos, 130 of which are active.