Secure Coding
Matthew Butler is a security researcher who has been using C++ professionally since 1990. He has spent the past three decades as a systems architect and software engineer developing systems for network security, law enforcement and national defense. He primarily works in signals intelligence and security on platforms ranging from embedded micro-controllers to FPGAs to large-scale, real-time platforms.
He is on the staff of both CppCon and C++Now as well as a member of the C++ Standards Committee. He spends most of his time in EWG, SG12 (Undefined Behavior and Vulnerabilities), SG14 (Low Latency) and, now, SG21 (Contracts). He is also a member of WG23 (Programming Language Vulnerabilities).
He prefers the role of predator when dealing with hackers and lives in the Rocky Mountains with his wife and daughter.
News
Matt Butler
Links
- CppCon 2018: Matthew Butler “Secure Coding Best Practices: Your First Line is the Last Line of Defense”
- C++Now 2019: Matthew Butler “Secure Coding Best Practices - Threat Hunting”
- P1705 - Enumerating Undefined Behavior
Sponsors
- Errors that static code analysis does not find because it is not used
- PVS-Studio in the Clouds - Running the Analysis on Travis CI