Azul Mission Control and Java Flight Recorder are powerful tools for Java developers, which have been open-sourced by Oracle and are now part of OpenJDK 8, 11, and later versions. This webinar shows how these tools can also be used in production environments, e.g., to improve DevOpsSec processes. A live demo delivered by Azul customer Curity shows how these tools are used in combination with their product, the Curity Identity Server, which implements the OAuth and OpenID Connect standards to provide secure login and API access. This webinar also discusses how Curity uses and embeds Azul's Java Runtime Environment to deliver a highly scalable, secure and readily-deployable digital authentication service that can be triaged in high-security environments using Java Flight Recorder and other tools.
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Anyone who works in IT will, by now, be acutely aware of the critical security vulnerability that was revealed in the Log4J library last week. It’s even being reported in mainstream media with...

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This webinar discusses the current and future state of the Java core platform, JDKs and enterprise Java development, JDK 17 and 18, cloud migration strategies, and log4j.

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Recommendations for Branch Chiefs around managing Java vulnerabilities, whether for applications like log4j or in Java itself

It’s been more than 2 years since Oracle required subscription-based licensing.

Since Oracle stopped providing free security updates for Java 8 and 11, there have been 71 published Java security vulnerabilities, including 11 published on July 14th. Deploying fixes to secure Java

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This white paper explains what Azul Platform Core is, and how to migrate applications from the Oracle JDK to the Zulu builds of OpenJDK.
Why OpenJDK CPU updates deliver better security and less operational risk.

Updating Java has changed. In January 2019, the last public updates (for commercial users) of both Oracle JDK 8 and the Oracle OpenJDK JDK 11 were released. Non-commercial users, for... The post...
Certified builds of OpenJDK with cost-effective, timely security updates.

Back in April 2019 the way most Java users accessed updates for the JDK changed. The reason for this was a combination of changes made by Oracle to how the JDK is developed and the licensing...

It’s been more than 2 years since Oracle required subscription-based licensing for Java 8 and 11 support, the versions in production by the majority of Java users. Throughout this realignment,...

Learn about security, compliance and redistribution risks of unsupported Java, and how support negates those risks and adds value.

Why the support provided with Azul Platform Core is second-to-none, compared to expensive Oracle Java SE and compared to free builds.