OWASP Software Component Verification Standard
The Software Component Verification Standard (SCVS) is a community-driven effort to establish a framework for identifying activities, controls, and best practices, which can help in identifying and reducing risk in a software supply chain.
Managing risk in the software supply chain is important to reduce the surface area of systems vulnerable to exploits, and to measure technical debt as a barrier to remediation.
Measuring and improving software supply chain assurance is crucial for success. Organizations with supply chain visibility are better equipped to protect their brand, increase trust, reduce time-to-market, and manage costs in the event of a supply chain incident.
Software supply chains involve:
- technology
- people
- processes
- institutions
- and additional variables
Raising the bar for supply chain assurance requires the active participation of risk managers, mission owners, and business units like legal and procurement, which have not traditionally been involved with technical implementation.
Determination of risk acceptance criteria is not a problem that can be solved by enterprise tooling: it is up to risk managers and business decision makers to evaluate the advantages and trade-offs of security measures based on system exposure, regulatory requirements, and constrained financial and human resources. Mandates that are internally unachievable, or that bring development or procurement to a standstill, constitute their own security and institutional risks.
SCVS is designed to be implemented incrementally, and to allow organizations to phase in controls at different levels over time.
SCVS has the following goals:
- Develop a common set of activities, controls, and best-practices that can reduce risk in a software supply chain
- Identify a baseline and path to mature software supply chain vigilance