Artificial Intelligence is pushing DevSecOps into a new phase where security is no longer just about detecting vulnerabilities, but increasingly about resolving them automatically within the flow of software delivery. As many organizations are discovering, DevSecOps historically gave teams visibility into risk. AI is now turning that visibility into automated remediation. This evolution has taken place across four phases. From Discovery to Action One of the most significant shifts is that security tooling no longer stops at identifying problems. AI systems can detect an issue, recommend a fix, open a ticket, update code, or prepare a pull request for human approval. Traditional DevSecOps created strong visibility into vulnerabilities, but often lacked mechanisms to ensure remediation happened quickly and consistently. AI is helping close that gap between insight and action. In many environments, when a vulnerable library or dependency is detected, AI systems can automatically test s...
The architectural shift to independently deployable services was supposed to make software delivery faster and less risky. In many aspects, it has. Teams can ship a change to one service without coordinating a release across the entire system. A bug fix in the payment service does not require a synchronized deployment with the notification service, the user service, and the order management service. Ownership is cleaner. Blast radius is smaller. Deployment frequency goes up. What this architectural shift did not change is what happens between services. Services still call each other. They still depend on each other’s response shapes, error codes, and behavioral contracts. They still make assumptions, encoded in test suites and integration layers, about how their dependencies will behave. What changed is the rate at which those assumptions can become outdated – and the rate at which the regression testing tools designed for a different architectural model can fail to catch w...