Richard Bird
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
from the standpoint of what will come next, which is a move into runtime protection, where a signal will be taken off of that intelligent engine that's comparing normal to abnormal. And then that signal will be passed to an application to a microservice
to any number of other ways that APIs are used, where security will be invoked in that moment, and it doesn't go through some kind of policy creation, some firewall somewhere, some other type of kludgy method to try and protect an organization with a sledgehammer by doing an IP block, but you'll be able to use a surgical scalpel to be able to address the actual weakness that's manifesting.
to any number of other ways that APIs are used, where security will be invoked in that moment, and it doesn't go through some kind of policy creation, some firewall somewhere, some other type of kludgy method to try and protect an organization with a sledgehammer by doing an IP block, but you'll be able to use a surgical scalpel to be able to address the actual weakness that's manifesting.
to any number of other ways that APIs are used, where security will be invoked in that moment, and it doesn't go through some kind of policy creation, some firewall somewhere, some other type of kludgy method to try and protect an organization with a sledgehammer by doing an IP block, but you'll be able to use a surgical scalpel to be able to address the actual weakness that's manifesting.
The short answer to the long answer I just gave is, is the API security platform you need to be looking for needs to be answering all those questions because APIs operate across that entire infinite loop lifecycle. They don't just one and done. And so you need to be able to actually address security across the entirety of an API's existence.
The short answer to the long answer I just gave is, is the API security platform you need to be looking for needs to be answering all those questions because APIs operate across that entire infinite loop lifecycle. They don't just one and done. And so you need to be able to actually address security across the entirety of an API's existence.
The short answer to the long answer I just gave is, is the API security platform you need to be looking for needs to be answering all those questions because APIs operate across that entire infinite loop lifecycle. They don't just one and done. And so you need to be able to actually address security across the entirety of an API's existence.
And not just one, but the hundreds and the thousands and tens of thousands you're exposed to.
And not just one, but the hundreds and the thousands and tens of thousands you're exposed to.
And not just one, but the hundreds and the thousands and tens of thousands you're exposed to.