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Thursday May 29, 2025 2:15pm - 3:00pm CEST
The exponentially growing number of software security vulnerabilities and data breaches highlights a persistent gap between the implementation of the secure development lifecycle and particularly secure coding practices and their intended outcomes. Despite significant financial investments in application security and the advancements in secure software development methodologies, the effectiveness of these practices remains inconsistent. Our session is based on a multi-phase and multi-year research, conducted in two global enterprise software companies and explores how a combination of developers' security education, organizational security climate, and metrics can enhance secure coding performance and reduce software vulnerabilities.

In December 2004, Steve Lipner introduced to the world the trustworthy computing security development lifecycle. A framework which included three main pillars: Requirements for repeatable secure development processes, requirements for engineers secure coding education and requirements for measurements and accountability for software security. Guided by this three-pillar framework , our research emphasizes the under-addressed areas of developer education and organizational accountability and measurements.

Through a series of three studies, conducted in two global software companies and led by the University of Haifa in Israel, this session will present the results of an academic research that made an attempt to identify the root cause for the ever increasing number of software security vulnerabilities and investigates the effectiveness of secure coding training, the impact of organizational security climate interventions, and the correlation between security climate and secure coding performance in order to evaluate whether the later two, which were prominently left in the shades, could provide a solution to the problem.

The first study evaluates the efficacy of secure coding training programs, revealing that while training improves knowledge, it fails to significantly to reduce newly introduced vulnerabilities. The second study demonstrates that targeted organizational interventions, including leadership communication and process improvements, significantly enhance organizational security climate. The final study found significant correlation between positive security climate and secure coding performance improvement, evidenced by a higher ratio of mitigated vulnerabilities.

This research provides actionable insights for both academia and industry. It underscores the importance of integrating secure coding education with organizational climate improvements to achieve measurable security outcomes. The findings offer a comprehensive approach to reducing cyber security risks while advocating for a dual focus on technical skills and cultural transformation within software development environments.
Speakers
avatar for Tomer Gershoni

Tomer Gershoni

Ex-CSO, ZoomInfo
Tomer Gershoni is a long-time Cybersecurity executive.Most recently, Mr. Gershoni led ZoomInfo’s information security team, as its Senior Vice President and Chief Security Officer. Overseeing physical and digital security and privacy efforts and leading ZoomInfo’s work to safeguard... Read More →
Thursday May 29, 2025 2:15pm - 3:00pm CEST
Room 115

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