AWS announced the preview of the Amazon Q Developer integration in GitHub.
Only a fraction of critical vulnerabilities are truly worth prioritizing, according to the State of DevSecOps 2025 from Datadog.
To better understand the severity of a vulnerability, Datadog developed a prioritization algorithm that factored in runtime context to its Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base score. Adding in runtime context provided factors about a vulnerability — for example, whether the vulnerability was running in a production environment, or if the application in which the vulnerability was found was exposed to the internet — that CVSS did not take into account. This helped to reduce noise and identify the issues that are most urgent. After runtime context was applied, Datadog found that only 18% of vulnerabilities with a critical CVSS score — less than one in five — were still considered critical.
"The State of DevSecOps 2025 report found that security engineers are wasting a lot of time on vulnerabilities that aren't necessarily all that severe," said Andrew Krug, Head of Security Advocacy at Datadog. "The massive amount of noise security teams have to deal with is a major issue because it distracts from prioritizing the really critical vulnerabilities. If defenders are able to spend less time triaging issues, they can reduce their organizations' attack surface all the faster. Focusing on easily exploitable vulnerabilities that are running in production environments for publicly exposed applications will yield the greatest real-world improvements in security posture."
Another key finding from the report was that vulnerabilities are particularly prevalent among Java services, with 44% of applications containing a known-exploited vulnerability. The average number of applications with a known-exploited vulnerability among the other services in the report—Go, Python, .NET, PHP, Ruby and JavaScript—was only 2%.
In addition to being more likely to contain high-impact vulnerabilities, Java applications are also patched more slowly than those from other programming ecosystems. The report found that applications from the Java-based Apache Maven ecosystem took 62 days on average for library fixes, compared to 46 days for those in the .NET-based ecosystem and 19 days for applications built using npm packages, which are JavaScript-based.
Other key findings from the report include:
Attackers continue to target the software supply chain
The report identified thousands of malicious PyPI and npm libraries — some of these packages were malicious by nature and attempted to mimic a legitimate package (for instance, passports-js mimicking the legitimate passport library), a technique known as typosquatting. Others were active takeovers of popular, legitimate dependencies (such as Ultralytics, Solana web3.js, and lottie-player). These techniques are used both by state-sponsored actors and cybercriminals.
Credential management is improving, but slowly
One of the most common causes of data breaches is long-lived credentials. Last year, 63% of organizations used a form of long-lived credential at least once to authenticate GitHub Actions pipelines. This year, that number dropped to 58%, a positive sign that organizations are slowly improving their credential management processes.
Outdated libraries are a challenge for all developers
Across all programming languages, dependencies are months behind their latest major update. And those that are less frequently deployed are more likely to be using out-of-date libraries — dependencies in services that are deployed less than once a month are 47% more outdated than those deployed daily. This is an issue for developers as outdated libraries can increase the likelihood that a dependency contains unpatched, exploitable vulnerabilities.
Methodology: For the report, Datadog analyzed tens of thousands of applications and container images within thousands of cloud environments in order to assess the types of risks defenders need to be aware of and what practices they can adopt to improve their security posture.
Industry News
The OpenSearch Software Foundation, the vendor-neutral home for the OpenSearch Project, announced the general availability of OpenSearch 3.0.
Wix.com announced the launch of the Wix Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server.
Pulumi announced Pulumi IDP, a new internal developer platform that accelerates cloud infrastructure delivery for organizations at any scale.
Qt Group announced plans for significant expansion of the Qt platform and ecosystem.
Testsigma introduced autonomous testing capabilities to its automation suite — powered by AI coworkers that collaborate with QA teams to simplify testing, speed up releases, and elevate software quality.
Google is rolling out an updated Gemini 2.5 Pro model with significantly enhanced coding capabilities.
BrowserStack announced the acquisition of Requestly, the open-source HTTP interception and API mocking tool that eliminates critical bottlenecks in modern web development.
Jitterbit announced the evolution of its unified AI-infused low-code Harmony platform to deliver accountable, layered AI technology — including enterprise-ready AI agents — across its entire product portfolio.
The Cloud Native Computing Foundation® (CNCF®), which builds sustainable ecosystems for cloud native software, and Synadia announced that the NATS project will continue to thrive in the cloud native open source ecosystem of the CNCF with Synadia’s continued support and involvement.
RapDev announced the launch of Arlo, an AI Agent for ServiceNow designed to transform how enterprises manage operational workflows, risk, and service delivery.
Check Point® Software Technologies Ltd. announced that its Quantum Firewall Software R82 — the latest version of Check Point’s core network security software delivering advanced threat prevention and scalable policy management — has received Common Criteria EAL4+ certification, further reinforcing its position as a trusted security foundation for critical infrastructure, government, and defense organizations worldwide.
Postman announced full support for the Model Context Protocol (MCP), helping users build better AI Agents, faster.
Opsera announced new Advanced Security Dashboard capabilities available as an extension of Opsera's Unified Insights for GitHub Copilot.