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This document describes our security policy. We cannot guarantee that no leak will ever happen, but we do our best to keep your data safe. |
This document describes our security policy. We cannot guarantee that no leak will ever happen, but we do our best to keep your data safe.
Published annexes
Your data
Please see our Privacy Policy concerning how we manage your data.
How we develop secure software
We use code reviews to detect vulnerabilities before merging and delivering to customers,
We ensure that we check for permissions for any resources we have, and we regularly review those permissions,
We use Git to manage changes, so that any code that goes to production is easily auditable.
How we keep our communications secure
We make our best to use state-of-the-art techniques to keep the data safe:
We use SSH keys to access our servers,
We use HTTPS and SSL certificates to communicate between us and with you.
We don't transfer data in clear-text over the network.
How we keep the data secure
Once again, we make our best to use state-of-the-art techniques to keep the data safe:
We host
data using Digital Ocean and Amazon AWSour websites on Digital Ocean,
We host our Cloud applications on Amazon AWS,
Data is encrypted at rest and in transit in our Amazon AWS installations,
The hard drives of our personal computers are encrypted (for example with Apple's FileVault 2),
Our personal backup drives are encrypted (for example with Apple's FileVault 2 / Time Machine).
Where we host your data
Please see the Privacy Policy on where we store data.
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Important: If you notice a vulnerability, please submit a report to https://requirementyogi.atlassian.net/servicedesk/customer/portals .
We will investigate as soon as we can and write an internal report,
If we confirm the vulnerability, we will notify Atlassian,
If a breach allowed access or alteration of customer data, we also notify our GDPR authorities within 72hrs (namely CNIL, for France),
If a breach allowed access or alteration of customer data by an external person, we also notify those customers directly.
If a breach only allowed
twousers of the same customer to view/
edit dataedit data they were not permitted to (permission violation), we choose whether we only notify customers through the release notes when delivering the new version, or whether we directly contact customers.
We detect vulnerabilities using:
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Participation to Atlassian's bug bounty program, vulnerabilities reported by Atlassian themselves, and obviously we'll also listen to vulnerabilities reported by external people,
Regular pentests (
onceOnce a year - Please check out our last security audit - Cloud (19/12/2023)),
NPM's automatic tool (npm audit),
Maven's automatic tool (Maven Dependency Check, which uses the NIST / OWASP database and also detects NPM-related vulnerabilities).
Notes:
Automatic tools detect suspects in most common industry libraries quite frequently, whether we are affected or not. Therefore, we do not publish a report for each of them, we simply upgrade the library or ensure we are not using the feature of the library which has the vulnerability. Our release process blocks the release of software anyway until the suspect is resolved.
If a vulnerability looks grave to us (ability to access or alter customer data), we investigate whether it would have allowed access or alteration of customer data, and we apply the process above.
Please send notifications to https://requirementyogi.atlassian.net/servicedesk/customer/portals (In case this portal meets a breach, we are also available by email at security@requirementyogi.comsecurity@r-yogi.com).
How we perform audits
Every year, we perform a security audit with an external third-party. We've published the result of the last audit on this page: Security audit (19/12/2023).