Analyzability is a design principle that distinguishes Cedar from other languages, allowing users to verify properties of Cedar policies through automated reasoning. This blog post explains how Cedar is analyzable, and why this is important. https://t.co/Efj59Jh3jo
Learn how Twilio use Cedar to externalize authorization
🎧 Listen the podcast on
Amazon Music : https://t.co/hoYHpTZjEI
Spotify : https://t.co/1RzmvGXG9s
Apple Podcast : https://t.co/aULUueFpIH
Excited to announce a new open source project, Cedar access controls for Kubernetes. This project brings the power of Cedar to Kubernetes authorization and admission validation. More at https://t.co/TPEFkE0a4V
#cedarpolicy Confused by RBAC, ReBAC, ABAC and PBAC. Wondering how a Role can be a Relationship, stored in an Attribute and referenced in a Policy. See https://t.co/OtxyTwRDQ2
Some of these API fixes apply breaking changes; and there are also necessary minor breaking changes to the schema format. The goal is to not need to make further breaking changes to the API through 2025.
Cedar 4.0 is now available. It supports the JSON APIs required for the WASM bindings, improves the quality of error messages, plus some fixes for the Java APIs. See https://t.co/xouj1l7Hom
Not just a clever name - Cedarling brings #cedarpolicy evaluation to a device near you, with a local agent that runs in the browser or on your mobile application.
Episode 45: Intro to the Cedarling https://t.co/TpPEfN88yn via @YouTube
We've completed a comparative security assessment of authorization policy languages: Cedar, Rego, and the OpenFGA modeling language. https://t.co/CPtHkQDKl3