Event

Boston Security March 2025 Meetup

Date
March 20, 2025
Time
6:00 PM
Event Type
In person
Location
North America
Event Overview

We’re excited to feature Nate Michalov, Solution Architect at Endor Labs, at this meetup, who will deliver an insightful session titled “Dependency Falsehoods and What that Means for Security

Session Overview:
There are common assumptions about how dependency management tools work in application development and how third party code interacts with code written in house. A lot of these assumptions fall apart under scrutiny, and the results is that third-party code and introduce a number of non-obvious risks and attack surfaces for modern software applications.

Don’t miss this thought-provoking discussion on common misconceptions surrounding dependency management in application development.

Join us for the Boston Security March 2025 Meetup!

Want to stay in the loop?

Sign up for our newsletter.

Claude Fable 5: Mythos-grade hype, record cheating, and a few hall-of-fame entries
Average results with 59.8% on functional solves and just 19.0% on security solves
Read more
Recall, not reasoning: how AI coding agents cheat security benchmarks
Recall, not reasoning: how AI coding agents cheat security benchmarks
Read more
Endor Labs + Cursor: Building the security foundation for agentic coding
Endor Labs + Cursor: Building the security foundation for agentic coding
Read more
Introducing Full Stack Reachability: Container Scanning That Actually Reduces Noise
Cut container vulnerability noise by up to 90% with full-stack reachability analysis spanning application and container image OS layers.
Read more
Classic Vulnerabilities Meet AI Infrastructure: Why MCP Needs AppSec
MCP servers inherit classical vulnerabilities like command injection, path traversal, and SSRF. Here's why LLMs and MCP deserve the same security practices as traditional applications.
Read more
How Fake Font Packages Abused npm as a CDN
101 packages disguised as font files distributed 34 TiB of data via npm's infrastructure—with a total of 4.3 PiB transferred via downloads.
Read more