Rust is growing in popularity. Its unique security model promises memory safety and concurrency safety, while providing the performance of C/C++. In this podcast from the Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute (SEI), David Svoboda and Joe Sible, both engineers in the SEI’s CERT Division, talk with principal researcher Suzanne Miller about the Rust programming language and its security-related features. Svoboda and Sible discuss Rust’s compile-time safety guarantees, the kinds of vulnerabilities that Rust fixes and those that it does not, situations in which users would not want to use Rust, and where interested users can go to get more information about the Rust programming language.
How the University of Pittsburgh Is Using the NIST Cybersecurity Framework
A Software Assurance Curriculum for Future Engineers
Four Types of Shift Left Testing
Capturing the Expertise of Cybersecurity Incident Handlers
Toward Speed and Simplicity: Creating a Software Library for Graph Analytics
Improving Quality Using Architecture Fault Analysis with Confidence Arguments
A Taxonomy of Testing Types
Reducing Complexity in Software & Systems
Designing Security Into Software-Reliant Systems
Agile Methods in Air Force Sustainment
Defect Prioritization With the Risk Priority Number
SEI-HCII Collaboration Explores Context-Aware Computing for Soldiers
An Introduction to Context-Aware Computing
Data Driven Software Assurance
Applying Agile in the DoD: Twelfth Principle
Supply Chain Risk Management: Managing Third Party and External Dependency Risk
Introduction to the Mission Thread Workshop
Applying Agile in the DoD: Eleventh Principle
A Workshop on Measuring What Matters
Applying Agile in the DoD: Tenth Principle
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