Seven Pernicious Kingdoms: A Taxonomy of Software Security Errors
IEEE Security and Privacy
Defining Misuse within the Development Process
IEEE Security and Privacy
Secure software engineering teaching modules
InfoSecCD '06 Proceedings of the 3rd annual conference on Information security curriculum development
Topes: reusable abstractions for validating data
Proceedings of the 30th international conference on Software engineering
New AspectJ Pointcuts for Integer Overflow and Underflow Detection
Information Security Journal: A Global Perspective
Secure Software Engineering: Learning from the Past to Address Future Challenges
Information Security Journal: A Global Perspective
Training ≠ education: putting secure software engineering back in the classroom
Proceedings of the 14th Western Canadian Conference on Computing Education
Empirical results on the study of software vulnerabilities (NIER track)
Proceedings of the 33rd International Conference on Software Engineering
WISE'05 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Web Information Systems Engineering
Proceedings of the 50th Annual Southeast Regional Conference
High false positive detection of security vulnerabilities: a case study
Proceedings of the 50th Annual Southeast Regional Conference
Hi-index | 0.00 |
This essential book for all software developers--regardless of platform, language, or type of application--outlines the “19 deadly sins” of software security and shows how to fix each one. Best-selling authors Michael Howard and David LeBlanc, who teach Microsoft employees how to secure code, have partnered with John Viega, the man who uncovered the 19 deadly programming sins to write this much-needed book. Coverage includes: Windows, UNIX, Linux, and Mac OS X C, C++, C#, Java, PHP, Perl, and Visual Basic Web, small client, and smart-client applications