
Are occasional disasters among widely used open source projects inevitable, or can we find a way to better fund maintainers and security? The post Who’s going to pay to fix open source security? appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/21/whos-going-to-pay-to-fix-open-source-security/

When the Log4j security issue was disclosed, developers came looking for answers. We took a look at our site data around it. The post Here’s how Stack Overflow users responded to Log4Shell, the Log4j vulnerability affecting almost everyone appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

From teachers to tutorials to peer groups, and now, video games, there are lots of ways to acquire skills on the AWS platform. The post A chat with the folks who lead training and certification at AWS appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/18/aws-technical-training-certification-learning/

An essential part of requirements analysis is understanding which quality characteristics are the most important so that designers can address them appropriately. The post Plan for tradeoffs: You can’t optimize all software quality attributes appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.

Welcome to ISSUE #108 of The Overflow! This newsletter is by developers, for developers, written and curated by the Stack Overflow team and Cassidy Williams. This week: UX headaches, the clear downsides of phantom braking, and testing with real dependencies instead of mockup or fakes. From the blog Favor real dependencies for unit testing stackoverflow.blogWhich dependencies should… The post The Overflow #108: Determining dependencies and phantom braking appeared first on Stack O

Modern DevOps could learn a few things from industrialized hackers. The post Safety in numbers: crowdsourcing data on nefarious IP addresses appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/14/crowdsec-security-ips-ip-blocking/

One of our most loved traditions is Stack Gives Back. Every year since 2009, we've surveyed Stack Exchange moderators about charities they would like to support and then donated $100 on behalf of each moderator. The post Stack Gives Back 2021 appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/13/stack-gives-back-2021/

Data scientists and engineers don’t always play well together. We discuss an approach to your tech stack that can bring them together. The post Podcast 406: Making Agile work for data science appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/12/podcast-406-making-agile-work-for-data-science/

Ben, Ryan, and Cassidy talk with Esther Jang, Matt Johnson, and Chris Webb of Seattle’s Local Connectivity Lab, a nonprofit that works in concert with the University of Washington to facilitate community-focused technology development and research. The post Podcast 405: Helping communities build their own LTE networks appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.
https://stackoverflow.blog/2022/01/11/podcast-405-helping-communities-build-their-own-lte-networks/

Nearly two years into the pandemic, many Americans are reevaluating their relationship with work. The post The Great Resignation is here. What does that mean for developers? appeared first on Stack Overflow Blog.