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Challenges With Software Supply Chain & CNAPP

CNAPP revenue growth will average over 26% annually.

In 2021, sales of CNAPP exceeded $1.7 billion, an increase of roughly 49% over 2020, according to a recent Frost & Sullivan analysis. According to Frost & Sullivan, CNAPP revenue growth will average over 26% annually between 2021 and 2026.

Anh Tien Vu, industry principal for international cybersecurity and the author of the report, projects that by 2026, revenues will surpass $5.4 billion "due to the increasing demand for a unified cloud security platform that strengthens cloud infrastructure security and protects applications and data throughout their life cycle."

How Does CNAPPs Function?

CNAPP platforms combine many security technologies and features to cut down on complexity and expense, offering:
  • The capabilities of the CSPM, CIEM, and CWPP tools are combined across the development life cycle, correlation of vulnerabilities, context, and linkages.
  • Identifying high-risk situations with detailed context.
  • Automatic and guided cleanup to address flaws and configuration errors.
  • Barriers to stopping unauthorized alterations to the architecture.
  • Simple interaction with SecOps ecosystems to quickly deliver notifications.
Security teams must transition from guarding infrastructure to guarding workload-running applications in order to maximize cloud security and compliance, enable DevOps, and reduce friction. That entails, at the very least, protecting the security of the production environment and cloud service configurations, with runtime protection serving as an important extra layer of security.

Attackers are focusing more and more on cloud-native targets in an effort to find vulnerabilities that may be used to compromise the software supply chain. The widespread effect that a vulnerability of this kind can have on the application environment was demonstrated by the Log4Shell flaw in the widely used Log4j Java runtime library last year.

Melinda Marks, a senior analyst at Enterprise Strategy Group, claims that while CNAPP helps businesses to set up DevSecOps processes where software engineers take the initiative to find potential bugs in code before delivering application runtimes into production, it also goes beyond. Before you release your applications to the cloud, this is crucial for preventing security risks since once you do, hackers can access them.

The scanning of development artifacts like containers and infrastructure as code (IaC), cloud infrastructure management (CIEM), runtime cloud workload protection platforms, and cloud security posture management (CSPM) are just a few of the siloed capabilities that CNAPPs combine. Together with a more uniform approach and improved awareness of the risk associated with cloud-native computing environments, CNAPP offers standard controls to reduce vulnerabilities.

Significantly, CNAPP also promotes communication between teams working on application development, cybersecurity, and IT infrastructure, opening the door to finding and fixing flaws before apps are put into use. CNAPP features are being added to security platforms by security manufacturers like Check Point and Palo Alto Networks. Marks cautions against the common misunderstanding that shifting security left is all about putting security first during the software development and build process.





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