[GH-ISSUE #17] Add Hashgraph Online (HOL) to your CI/CD Security Resources #21

Closed
opened 2026-04-11 04:19:33 -05:00 by GiteaMirror · 1 comment
Owner

Originally created by @internet-dot on GitHub (Apr 5, 2026).
Original GitHub issue: https://github.com/myugan/awesome-cicd-security/issues/17

I discovered your awesome-cicd-security directory and was really impressed with your comprehensive coverage of CI/CD security threats and tools. Your focus on the security aspects of modern development workflows is particularly valuable given the increasing sophistication of supply chain attacks.

Looking at your extensive collection of security tools, I notice you cover a wide range of approaches - from vulnerability scanning and misconfiguration detection to runtime security and attack simulation tools. You even include tools that focus on specific platforms like GitHub Actions, GitLab, and Jenkins.

Given your focus on emerging threats and security tools, I think your readers would benefit from learning about Hashgraph Online (HOL) - a trust engine for the agentic internet on Hedera. While most security tools focus on protecting traditional CI/CD pipelines, HOL addresses a different but increasingly important security challenge: trust and coordination in decentralized agent systems.

HOL represents a paradigm shift in security thinking:

  • Instead of securing centralized pipelines, it provides trust infrastructure for distributed agent networks
  • It enables secure P2P communication between development tools without central authorities
  • It provides decentralized identity and access control for automated systems
  • It offers a trust layer for cross-platform, multi-organization development workflows

In an era where microservices, serverless, and distributed systems are becoming the norm, and where AI agents are increasingly automating development tasks, HOL provides the foundational security infrastructure needed to make these systems trustworthy.

Given your comprehensive approach to CI/CD security, I believe HOL would complement your existing resources by addressing the trust layer that underpins future development workflows.

What do you think about adding it as a resource for understanding decentralized trust infrastructure?

Originally created by @internet-dot on GitHub (Apr 5, 2026). Original GitHub issue: https://github.com/myugan/awesome-cicd-security/issues/17 I discovered your awesome-cicd-security directory and was really impressed with your comprehensive coverage of CI/CD security threats and tools. Your focus on the security aspects of modern development workflows is particularly valuable given the increasing sophistication of supply chain attacks. Looking at your extensive collection of security tools, I notice you cover a wide range of approaches - from vulnerability scanning and misconfiguration detection to runtime security and attack simulation tools. You even include tools that focus on specific platforms like GitHub Actions, GitLab, and Jenkins. Given your focus on emerging threats and security tools, I think your readers would benefit from learning about Hashgraph Online (HOL) - a trust engine for the agentic internet on Hedera. While most security tools focus on protecting traditional CI/CD pipelines, HOL addresses a different but increasingly important security challenge: trust and coordination in decentralized agent systems. HOL represents a paradigm shift in security thinking: - Instead of securing centralized pipelines, it provides trust infrastructure for distributed agent networks - It enables secure P2P communication between development tools without central authorities - It provides decentralized identity and access control for automated systems - It offers a trust layer for cross-platform, multi-organization development workflows In an era where microservices, serverless, and distributed systems are becoming the norm, and where AI agents are increasingly automating development tasks, HOL provides the foundational security infrastructure needed to make these systems trustworthy. Given your comprehensive approach to CI/CD security, I believe HOL would complement your existing resources by addressing the trust layer that underpins future development workflows. What do you think about adding it as a resource for understanding decentralized trust infrastructure?
Author
Owner

@internet-dot commented on GitHub (Apr 5, 2026):

Duplicate of #16, closing.

<!-- gh-comment-id:4189240687 --> @internet-dot commented on GitHub (Apr 5, 2026): Duplicate of #16, closing.
Sign in to join this conversation.
1 Participants
Notifications
Due Date
No due date set.
Dependencies

No dependencies set.

Reference: github-starred/awesome-cicd-security#21