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Log4j’s Impact on Software Supply Chain Management

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In studying software engineering practices from 100,000 production applications and 4 million open source component migrations, Sonatype uncovered some eye-opening behaviors in modern software development. One surprising trend: Nearly 70% of dependency management decisions are suboptimal.

Understanding these migration paths helps make sense of the panic that ensued when a zero-day vulnerability was disclosed in the world’s most widely adopted logging framework, Log4j, in late 2021. If you weren't automating software supply management and paying attention to your dependencies, you were left vulnerable. As the stewards of Maven Central, in addition to studying production applications Sonatype teams monitored download data, ensuring the world has access to reliable, up-to-date information on the latest Log4Shell trends.

Sal Kimmich
Developer Advocate, Sonatype
Sal heads developer relations for open source at Sonatype and is passionate about helping engineers, ethical hackers and digital enthusiasts understand the complexity of modern software development. With more than a decade of experience as a machine learning engineer in the healthcare and tech for good sectors, their work is now focused on filling the cracks in the open source software supply chain to build a better digital future for all of us. By day, you'll find Sal working with site reliability engineers, DevOps and cybersecurity specialists to implement best tools and practices to remove toil from developer workflows. By night, you'll find Sal mentoring the next generation of engineers in cloud computing from around the globe, helping them to make the world a better place through the clever use of math.

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