Portshift announced a new capability that delivers runtime policies
for vulnerability remediation, allowing more secure workload communications.
Portshift's risk mitigation engine connects Kubernetes network policies with
discovered vulnerabilities in production workloads, allowing it to mitigate the
risk potential of vulnerable containers until the replacement with a new
version that removes the vulnerable component.
With Portshift, the company has taken DevSecOps to the next level with a
platform that connects identified vulnerabilities with the identity of the
workload, providing a measured balance that prevents workload communications
based on the risk level and the potential threat to certain applications. The
technology has the ability to block traffic based on the vulnerability level
discovered, providing a single picture for complete visualization of these
processes during runtime. This provides protection that is matched to the
DevOps applications in production.
According to a 2019 report by Gartner. "Security can't be an
afterthought. It needs to be embedded in the DevOps process, which Gartner
refers to as "DevSecOps...Integrate an image-scanning process to prevent
vulnerabilities as part of an enterprise's continuous integration/continuous
delivery (CI/CD) process, where applications are scanned during the build and
run phases of the software development life cycle."
Portshift mitigates vulnerabilities with greater sophistication. Available
as part of the company's identity-based cloud native workload security and risk
management platform, the technology ensures that Kubernetes environments are
protected from development to runtime. When unknown, and possibly malicious
workloads are detected, they are quickly identified and rapidly removed using
Portshift's innovative DevOps security platform. The company's workload
management processes offer an alternative to the use of IP addresses, ports and
firewalls to secure the network perimeter as it addresses the unique security
requirements of cloud-native microservices running in containers both inside
and outside of the network perimeter.
"With the availability of this
identity-based approach, we are actively collaborating with industry leading
vulnerability scanning providers including Twistlock, Aqua and Clair to move
the industry forward," said Zohar Kaufman, Co-Founder and VP, R&D for
Portshift. "Having Portshift's information-rich view of containers in real
time will be exceedingly important in 2020 as more determined hackers continue
their efforts to attack earlier in the development process in order to exploit
vulnerabilities before they are addressed by DevSecOps."