Backslash Security released a new
research study, Breaking
the Catch-up Cycle: The New Cloud-Native AppSec Paradigm Survey Report, exploring how the state of
application security has evolved given the rise of cloud-native application
development. The study examines the practices, tools, and needs of CISOs,
AppSec managers, and AppSec engineers at enterprise organizations of 1,000 or
more employees with mature cloud-native app development environments.
The
study reveals that AppSec teams are stuck in a catch-up cycle, unable to keep
up with the increasingly rapid, agile dev pace, and playing security defense
via an endless and unproductive vulnerability chase. Notably, 58% of
respondents report spending over 50% of their time chasing vulnerabilities,
with a shocking 89% spending at least 25% of their time in this defensive mode.
This costly ‘defensive tax' - the cost of employing AppSec engineers who chase
vulnerabilities rather than drive a comprehensive cloud-native AppSec program -
is estimated to be upwards of $1.2 million annually.
Given
the accelerated pace of digital innovation across enterprises of all sizes and
the blurred lines between AppSec and CloudSec, enterprise AppSec teams are
saddled with solutions that have not caught up to the cloud pace. As a
result, AppSec professionals are losing faith in the prevailing AppSec
tools:
- Almost all organizations are
seeing a widespread impact of the lack of cloud-native AppSec tools, including
growing friction between AppSec and dev teams (39%), jeopardized ability to
generate revenue (39%), and inability to retain high-value dev talent (38%) and
AppSec talent (35%);
- 94% of respondents cited
multiple issues with today's AppSec technologies; top complaints were the
considerable amount of time spent prioritizing findings (48%) and that existing
AppSec tools are noisy (45%);
- SAST and DAST are quickly
losing ground, with just 32% of respondents stating that they use either of
these prevailing standards extensively.
The
report emphasizes the urgent need for a new AppSec paradigm that maps a
clear path to a modern standard for cloud-native AppSec success,
characterized by end-to-end visualization of all microservices, automatic
identification and prioritization of real risks, and intelligent triaging and
remediation. In assessing the importance of these three key tenets of modern
AppSec:
- 82% agree that automating
threat model visualization will help AppSec teams save time and manual labor
analyzing cloud-native application risks;
- 91% believe correlating
application security risks with the application's exposure to the outside
world, such as via open APIs, is important;
- 91% believe differentiating
between general code weaknesses and critical vulnerabilities is important;
- Eight out of the nine total
capabilities that define this new cloud-native AppSec paradigm were ranked as
"critical" or "important" by 70%+ of respondents.
However, the AppSec industry suffers from a massive cloud-native
enablement gap. Across all of the most critical capabilities, respondents
reported that enablement is sorely lacking:
- 85% of respondents say the
ability to differentiate between real risks and noise is critical to their
success, making it the #1 most important capability; yet only 38% of
respondents are enabled to do so;
- This trend persists
throughout, including "correlating security findings to the developer or dev
team responsible for the fix" (78% vs. 43%); "meeting compliance standards"
(78% vs. 38%); and "efficient triaging between Dev and AppSec" (73% vs. 42%).
"What
we're hearing across the board is a message of urgency - we've entered a new,
cloud-native reality, and it's time to put an end to the AppSec catch-up game,"
said Shahar Man, co-founder and CEO of Backslash. "These outdated AppSec
methodologies hamper productivity, innovation and talent retention for both
AppSec and dev teams. The cloud-native application development paradigm calls
for a new, unified approach to application security that will make the friction
between development and AppSec teams a thing of the past, enable enterprises to
retain valuable talent, and accelerate innovation and growth."
This
report surveyed 300 security professionals specifically tasked with application
security for their organization, equally split between CISOs, AppSec managers
and AppSec engineers from U.S. companies with 1,000 or more employees.
Companies represent a wide range of industries.
Click
here to
download the report and learn more.