Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

How to Implement Network Policy in Amazon EKS to Secure Your Cluster

By default, pods are non-isolated; they accept traffic from any source. The Amazon EKS solution to this security concern is Network Policy that lets developers control network access to their services. Amazon EKS comes configured with Network Policy using Project Calico which can be used to secure your clusters. This class will describe a few use cases for network policy and a live demo implementing each use case.

Enforcing Enterprise Security Controls in Kubernetes using Calico Enterprise

Hybrid cloud infrastructures run critical business resources and are subject to some of the strictest network security controls. Irrespective of the industry and resource types, these controls broadly fall into three categories. Workloads (pods) running on Kubernetes are ephemeral in nature, and IP-based controls are no longer effective. The challenge is to enforce the organizational security controls on the workloads and Kubernetes nodes themselves.

Calico Enterprise Multi Cluster Management - Federated Identity and Services

Learn how to simplify deployment and ongoing operations for more than one cluster running Calico Enterprise. What is Calico Enterprise Multi-Cluster Management How is Calico Enterprise Multi-Cluster architected How to set up Calico Enterprise Multi-Cluster Management How to enable Federated Endpoint Identity and Services for Multi-Cluster use cases A Calico Enterprise trial is available after this session and you will be able to practice these use cases on your own within a hosted lab.

Authentication vs. Authorization: Why we need authorization standards

I witnessed the transition from bespoke authentication to standards-based authentication. It’s time to do the same for authorization. Twenty years ago, almost everything in the IT world was on-premises: hardware and software, including the tools you used to verify who your users were and what they could do in your systems.

LXC vs Docker: Why Docker is Better

LXC (LinuX Containers) is a OS-level virtualization technology that allows creation and running of multiple isolated Linux virtual environments (VE) on a single control host. These isolation levels or containers can be used to either sandbox specific applications, or to emulate an entirely new host. LXC uses Linux’s cgroups functionality, which was introduced in version 2.6.24 to allow the host CPU to better partition memory allocation into isolation levels called namespaces .

Enterprise Security Controls for Kubernetes

In this talk, we will explore how to meet common enterprise security control needs when running Kubernetes. Specifically, we will look at a range of common enterprise security needs and how you can meet these with standard Kubernetes primitives and open source projects such as Calico, or take it a step further with the additional features of Calico Enterprise.

Unified cloud-native authorization: Policy everywhere and for everyone

When we started Styra, we set out to rethink authorization and policy for the cloud-native environment. We knew that new risks and challenges would emerge as companies embraced the cloud and began using a whole new host of technologies and architectures for building applications. The constant changes and dynamic runtime of the cloud-native environment complicated matters even more.

Sysdig cuts onboarding for container and Kubernetes visibility and security to 5 minutes

Today, we are excited to announce a faster onboarding for Kubernetes visibility and security. With the SaaS-first approach and new enhancements to the Sysdig Secure DevOps Platform, you can get results after just a five-minute setup. This release includes a new guided onboarding process, out-of-the-box dashboards as part of curated essential workflows, and a new Sysdig Essentials tier. 5 minutes to onboard secure DevOps - YouTube An error occurred.

Getting started with secure DevOps

As you move to the cloud, your focus is on developing and deploying your applications. You may leave some functions for later, thinking they will slow you down. So when challenges appear your team feels unprepared. You need tools that are built for containers and Kubernetes, like the Sysdig Secure DevOps Platform. So your team can build visibility and security together in a secure DevOps workflow, and ship applications faster.