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@anjali shared a link, 1 month ago
Customer Marketing Manager, Last9

OTel Updates: OpenTelemetry Proposes Changes to Stability, Releases, and Semantic Conventions

OpenTelemetry proposes stability changes: stable-by-default distributions, decoupled instrumentation, and epoch releases for production deployments.

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@laura_garcia shared a post, 1 month ago
Software Developer, RELIANOID

deploy the RELIANOID Load Balancer Community Edition v7 on Azure using Terraform

🚀 New Technical Guide Available! You can now deploy the RELIANOID Load Balancer Community Edition v7 on Azure using Terraform in just a few minutes: ✔️ Install prerequisites (Terraform, Azure CLI, SSH keys) ✔️ Use the official Terraform module from the Registry ✔️ Automatically provision all Azure r..

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@anjali shared a link, 1 month ago
Customer Marketing Manager, Last9

How to Track Down the Real Cause of Sudden Latency Spikes

Sudden latency spikes rarely have a single cause. This blog shows how to uncover the real source using traces, histograms, and modern debugging signals.

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@anjali shared a link, 1 month ago
Customer Marketing Manager, Last9

Hidden Correlations Traditional Monitoring Misses

Last9 is built to work with high-cardinality telemetry, and we’ve been covering it in detail through our series. This piece looks at a familiar pain: issues that only show up for a specific tenant or deployment. Why does that context disappear in most monitoring setups?

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@shurup shared a post, 1 month, 1 week ago
@palark

Helm 4 or Nelm? What's the difference

Helm werf

Helm 4.0.0 brought several new features to its users, such as Server-Side Apply support and kstatus-based resource watching.Nelm, an alternative to Helm created in werf, a CNCF Sandbox project, has been offering these capabilities even before. Nelm has many more new features for Kubernetes deploymen..

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@anjali shared a link, 1 month, 1 week ago
Customer Marketing Manager, Last9

Which Observability Tool Helps with Visibility Without Overspend

A detailed look at observability platforms so you can choose tools that keep visibility high and costs steady as your systems scale.

go
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@laura_garcia shared a post, 1 month, 1 week ago
Software Developer, RELIANOID

🚀 RELIANOID at DevOpsDays Tel Aviv 2025

📅 December 11, 2025 • 📍 Tel Aviv, Israel What a week ahead! Our team is working full-throttle as we prepare to attend three major events in just a few days — and we’re thrilled to add DevOpsDays Tel Aviv to the list. We’ll be joining the community to share how RELIANOID helps DevOps and platform tea..

devopsdays telaviv relianoid
The Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) is an industry-backed foundation focused on strengthening the security of the global open source software ecosystem. It brings together major technology companies, cloud providers, open source communities, and security experts to address systemic security challenges that affect how software is built, distributed, and consumed.

OpenSSF was launched in 2021 and operates under the Linux Foundation, combining efforts from earlier initiatives such as the Core Infrastructure Initiative (CII) and industry-led supply chain security programs. Its mission is to make open source software more trustworthy, resilient, and secure by default, without placing unrealistic burdens on maintainers.

The foundation works across several key areas:

- Supply chain security: Developing frameworks, best practices, and tools to secure the software lifecycle from source to deployment. This includes stewardship of projects like sigstore and leadership on SLSA (Supply-chain Levels for Software Artifacts).

- Security tooling: Supporting and incubating open source tools that help developers detect, prevent, and remediate vulnerabilities at scale.

- Vulnerability management: Improving how vulnerabilities are discovered, disclosed, scored, and fixed across open source projects.

- Education and best practices: Publishing guidance, training, and maturity models such as the OpenSSF Best Practices Badge Program, which helps projects assess and improve their security posture.

- Metrics and research: Advancing data-driven approaches to understanding open source security risks and ecosystem health.

OpenSSF operates through working groups and special interest groups (SIGs) that focus on specific problem areas like securing builds, improving dependency management, or automating provenance generation. This structure allows practitioners to collaborate on concrete, actionable solutions rather than high-level policy alone.

By aligning maintainers, enterprises, and security teams, OpenSSF plays a central role in reducing large-scale risks such as dependency confusion, compromised build systems, and malicious package injection. Its work underpins many modern DevSecOps and cloud-native security practices and is increasingly referenced by governments and enterprises as a baseline for secure software development.