HomeLatest FeedsTechnology NewsQuality and safety are suffering under the pressure of digital transformation

Quality and safety are suffering under the pressure of digital transformation



According to a new survey of 1,300 CIOs and DevOps leaders at large enterprises, IT teams are finding it increasingly difficult to maintain software reliability and security amid the acceleration of digital transformation and the increasing complexity of cloud-based environments.

Made by Dynatrace study According to 90 percent of organizations, digital transformation has accelerated in the last 12 months. 78 percent of organizations deploy software updates to production every 12 hours or more, and 54 percent say they do so at least every two hours.

However, DevOps teams spend 31 percent of their time on manual tasks related to detecting code quality issues and vulnerabilities, reducing time spent on innovation. In addition, 55 percent of organizations make trade-offs between quality, security, and user experience to meet the need for rapid transformation.

“It’s difficult for teams to accelerate the pace of innovation while maintaining the highest quality and security standards. More frequent software deployments, combined with complex cloud-native architectures, make it easy for bugs and vulnerabilities to move into production, where they impact the customer experience and pose risks.” There simply isn’t enough time for teams to test code as thoroughly as there was when it was a once-a-month deployment, but in today’s highly competitive, always-on economy, there’s no margin for error. Something has to change,” said Bernd Greifeneder, Dynatrace’s founder and chief technology officer. director of Beta News according to.

Convergence of observability and security practices will be critical to building a DevSecOps culture, 88 percent of CIOs say, and 90 percent say increasing the use of AIOps will be key to scaling those practices.

By 2024, organizations plan to increase their spending on automation in development, security and operations by 35 percent, as they invest more in continuous testing of software quality (54 percent) and security (49 percent) in production, automatic detection of vulnerabilities and blocking (41 percent), as well as the automation of issue validation (35 percent). However, 70 percent of CIOs say they need to increase their confidence in the accuracy of AI decisions before automating more of their CI/CD pipeline. In other words, they would introduce practices that would improve software development through automation throughout its entire life cycle. “Organizations know that manual approaches are not scalable,” added Greifeneder.

He says teams can’t afford to waste time and energy chasing false positives, looking for vulnerabilities with every new threat signal, or forensics to understand if data has been compromised. They must work together for faster and safer innovation. Automation and modern delivery practices like DevSecOps are key to this, but teams need to trust AI to make the right conclusions about the impact of a given vulnerability.

Hardware, software, tests, interesting and colorful news from the world of IT by clicking here!

Mr.Mario
Mr.Mario
I am a tech enthusiast, cinema lover, and news follower. and i loved to be stay updated with the latest tech trends and developments. With a passion for cyber security, I continuously seeks new knowledge and enjoys learning new things.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Must Read