[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":816},["ShallowReactive",2],{"/en-us/blog/ask-gitlab-security-paul-harrison":3,"navigation-en-us":37,"banner-en-us":447,"footer-en-us":457,"blog-post-authors-en-us-Heather Simpson":699,"blog-related-posts-en-us-ask-gitlab-security-paul-harrison":713,"blog-promotions-en-us":754,"next-steps-en-us":806},{"id":4,"title":5,"authorSlugs":6,"body":8,"categorySlug":9,"config":10,"content":14,"description":8,"extension":25,"isFeatured":12,"meta":26,"navigation":27,"path":28,"publishedDate":20,"seo":29,"stem":33,"tagSlugs":34,"__hash__":36},"blogPosts/en-us/blog/ask-gitlab-security-paul-harrison.yml","Ask Gitlab Security Paul Harrison",[7],"heather-simpson",null,"security",{"slug":11,"featured":12,"template":13},"ask-gitlab-security-paul-harrison",false,"BlogPost",{"title":15,"description":16,"authors":17,"heroImage":19,"date":20,"body":21,"category":9,"tags":22},"Ask GitLab Security: Paul Harrison","What’s it like working to secure one of the most transparent organizations in the world? Meet our security team.",[18],"Heather Simpson","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1749679726/Blog/Hero%20Images/ask-security-cover.png","2019-05-31","What’s it like working to secure one of the most transparent organizations\nin the world?  To be a security practitioner in a highly iterative and agile\nenvironment? What does that look like and what kind of people thrive in that\nenvironment? It takes a certain individual ... curious, analytical,\ncollaborative and dedicated. Of course, there’s more than meets the eye when\nit comes to our GitLab Security team; they also tackle the hard topics like\nthe age-old 'Is a hotdog a sandwich?' debate, Vim vs Emacs, and Linux\ndistros.\n\nWe take securing the GitLab product and service and protecting our company\nvery seriously. But, we try not to take ourselves too seriously. We hope you\nlearn something new in this series, but that you enjoy yourself too.\n\n\n![Paul Harrison Headshot](https://about.gitlab.com/images/blogimages/paul-harrison-headshot.png) \n\n\n**Name:** Paul Harrison\n\n\n**Title:** Senior Security Engineer / Interim Security Manager, Security\nOperations\n\n\n**How long have you been at GitLab?** I started in January 2019\n\n\n**GitLab handle:** [@pharrison](https://gitlab.com/pharrison)\n\n\n**Connect with Paul:** [LinkedIn](https://www.linkedin.com/in/pharrison33) /\n[Twitter](https://twitter.com/iyampaul)\n\n\n\n#### Tell us what you do here at GitLab:\n\nI’m responsible for defining and implementing the operational security\nresponse processes and procedures to handle new and emerging risks to GitLab\nthe company, the product, and GitLab.com. I’m also involved in day-to-day\nsecurity event handling and engaging with partner teams around GitLab on any\nrelated questions or issues.\n\n\n#### What’s the most challenging or rewarding aspect of your role?\n\nThe most challenging AND rewarding aspect is helping to design our security\nposture and working to meet those goals one step at a time. This is\nincredibly unique and challenging as we’re 100 percent remote, the\ntopography of the company and its environments is constantly iterating, and\nwe want to ensure we hold true to our [values](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/values/) by being\nas transparent and open as possible.\n\n\n#### And, what are the top 2-3 initiatives you’re currently focused on?\n\n- Operational Security Architecture: Designing the end-to-end flow of how\nsecurity risks, events, and incidents are handled across GitLab. (Handbook\nMR coming soon!)\n\n- [Log Aggregation Working\nGroup](https://handbook.gitlab.com/handbook/company/structure/working-groups/log-aggregation/): Analyzing,\ndocumenting, and working with Infrastructure and Development teams to\nimprove the quality and efficiency of logs being produced by GitLab-CE/EE\nand GitLab.com.\n\n\n#### How did you get into security?\n\nDialing into local\n[BBS](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulletin_board_system)s in the early\n'90s, IRC in the mid-90s, and being introduced to reading material like\nPhrack, 2600, and other amusing bits at an early and malleable age. Combined\nwith a general interest in discovering how things work, breaking them in the\nprocess, and the kind of interesting things you can find!\n\n\n#### In the past decade, how has your area of expertise changed?\n\n10 years ago I was almost entirely focused on the security and compliance\ntools necessary to keep a solid grasp on enterprise email (well ... as best\nas you can!). From there, I broadened my horizons by taking on security\nmanagement and architecture of local and remotely hosted environments, then\ncompliance for interesting and terrifying acronyms like GDPR. This has\nresulted in a decent breadth of knowledge in many areas … and enough to be\ndangerous in others.\n\n\n#### What is the most significant piece of security advice you could provide to a colleague or friend?\n\nPlease, please, please, please use a password manager like 1Password, or\nLastPass, or Bitwarden (examples, not endorsements, YMMV and pick what fits\nyour workflow best!) and start using it to generate and save unique and\ndifficult passwords for each of your sites or services. You won’t need to\nremember them and so you don’t need to use a memorable one. Then, while\nyou’re at it, turn on two-factor authentication (2FA), and not that SMS/text\nmessage-based one. Use an app like Google Authenticator or Microsoft\nAuthenticator, which will give you the six-digit number (aka Time-Based,\nOne-Time Password) on your mobile device, or better. Having strong, unique\npasswords and 2FA enabled will significantly decrease the chance of your\naccounts being compromised.\n\n\n#### GitLab is very unique in that we strive to be incredibly transparent...about everything. What sort of challenges does that present to you as a security professional? What opportunities?\n\n**_First, the opportunities:_**\n\n\nStriving, and for the vast majority of situations, succeeding, at being\ntransparent is a hugely rewarding and helpful experience for both GitLab and\nthe community. At first I was sceptical and from working with very\ntight-lipped organizations with their well-massaged disclosure\ncommunications, my mindset has been to not “air our dirty laundry.” **But,\nbeing able to be transparent about vulnerabilities and issues means:**\n\n- The community can see how we became aware of, handled, and resolved the\nsituation, then subsequently learned from it so we won’t repeat the issue.\nThis information might help them in their own environment, or their own\nprocesses, and, we hope, might also increase their trust in our product!\n\n- We can give credit to all the awesome, hard-working, and talented people\nat GitLab who come up with clever and creative solutions to protect our\ncustomers and their data. When the issues are public, anyone can see who\nworked it, came up with the obscure and amazing solution, and deployed it.\nIn most companies this information is part of their secret sauce, but this\nis something we can, should, and do celebrate.\n\n\n**_Now, the challenges:_**\n\n- The need to keep vulnerability details close so our customers have the\nopportunity to update before it’s being exploited in the wild.\n\n- Old habits die hard, particularly in the Security community. When the\ndefault state in most companies is to lock away and carefully communicate a\nwell-crafted and rehearsed statement, transparency is something to get used\nto and can be uncomfortable for many people who’ve been in the industry for\na while.\n\n- Determining, and sticking with, the few rare scenarios where, due to the\nsensitive nature, it is necessary to keep certain data confidential.  Scope\ncreep can be hard.\n\n\n#### What are your thoughts on cybersecurity bachelor’s degrees as a way to scale training of security professionals?\n\nWith the premise of a bachelor’s degree being more focused on providing the\ndeep, foundational knowledge and enabling people to continue to learn after\ncompleting the degree, a Security-focused bachelor’s program could be\nvaluable. However, the continued learning aspect is absolutely a necessity\nin this space as, despite [OWASP Top\n10](https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_Top_Ten_Project) (for\nexample) having largely remained unchanged, the rest of the security\nlandscape has shifted tremendously in the last decade. Without having the\nwillingness to grow and the tools at your disposal to understand how to\ngrow, you would have a difficult time.\n\n\n## Now, for the questions you *really* want to have answered:\n\n\n#### Favorite Linux distro?\n\nDebian, specifically Debian Stable. It just works. Fast and reliable for\nserver use and great for a desktop/workstation. I’ve been using Debian since\nversion 5 or 6 and it is always my first choice when setting up a new\nsystem.\n\n\n#### You get one superpower, what is it?\n\nI’d like to be able to look at any one plant and make it to grow at any\nspeed and to any size I wish. I could make one beanstalk be 100 feet tall\nand 3 feet wide, or a fully formed spruce tree but scaled down to a foot,\nall in a matter of seconds!\n\n\n#### Now, it’s time for the age-old debate: Is a hotdog a sandwich? And, on that note, is a taco a sandwich?\n\nNeither a hotdog nor a taco are sandwiches! A sandwich is formed by bringing\ntogether two distinct pieces of something to hold an object or several\nobjects between them, sandwiched between them one could say! A hotdog or\ntaco are different from a sandwich because in both circumstances the hotdog\nitself (aka meat-tube) or the taco fillings are inserted into a crevice\nformed from a single continuous piece of something, which is no longer\nsandwiching anything but instead is actually formed to enable the holding of\nthe hotdog or taco-fillings.",[23,24,9,9],"careers","inside 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statement",{"items":689},[690,693,696],{"text":691,"config":692},"Terms",{"href":517,"dataGaName":518,"dataGaLocation":465},{"text":694,"config":695},"Cookies",{"dataGaName":527,"dataGaLocation":465,"id":528,"isOneTrustButton":27},{"text":697,"config":698},"Privacy",{"href":522,"dataGaName":523,"dataGaLocation":465},[700],{"id":701,"title":18,"body":8,"config":702,"content":704,"description":8,"extension":25,"meta":708,"navigation":27,"path":709,"seo":710,"stem":711,"__hash__":712},"blogAuthors/en-us/blog/authors/heather-simpson.yml",{"template":703},"BlogAuthor",{"name":18,"config":705},{"headshot":706,"ctfId":707},"https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1749659488/Blog/Author%20Headshots/gitlab-logo-extra-whitespace.png","hsimpson",{},"/en-us/blog/authors/heather-simpson",{},"en-us/blog/authors/heather-simpson","4CpsZWXsBE_aB4RLpF20WPoTR1QnmwDhrVLV8WUGGTk",[714,727,742],{"content":715,"config":725},{"title":716,"description":717,"authors":718,"date":720,"body":721,"category":9,"tags":722,"heroImage":724},"Prepare your pipeline for AI-discovered zero-days","AI is finding vulnerabilities faster than teams can patch. Learn how pipeline enforcement, automated triage, and AI remediation close the gap.",[719],"Omer Azaria","2026-04-20","Anthropic's [Mythos Preview model](https://red.anthropic.com/2026/mythos-preview/) recently identified thousands of zero-day vulnerabilities across every major operating system and web browser, including an OpenBSD bug that went undetected for 27 years. In testing, Mythos autonomously chained four vulnerabilities into a working browser exploit that escaped its sandbox. Anthropic is restricting access to Mythos, but the company’s head of offensive cyber research expects threats to have comparable tooling within six to twelve months.\n\nThe defender side of the equation hasn't kept pace. One third of exploited Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) in the first half of 2025 showed activity on or before disclosure day, before most teams even know there's something to patch. AI is compressing that window further, accelerating attackers and flooding teams with whitehat disclosures faster than they can triage. Defender tooling has improved, but most organizations can't operationalize it fast enough to close the gap between discovery and exploitation.\n\nWhen the window between disclosure and exploitation is measured in hours, the security team can't be the last line of defense. Security has to run where code enters the system: in the pipeline, on every merge request, enforced by policy. The fixes that can be automated should be. The ones that can't need to reach the right human faster than they do today.\n\n## Known vulnerabilities are already outpacing remediation\n\nThe bottleneck isn't detection, it's acting at scale on what teams already know. Sixty percent of breaches in the 2025 Verizon DBIR involved exploiting known vulnerabilities where a patch was already available. Teams couldn’t close them in time.\n\nThe backlog was untenable before Mythos. Developers spend [11 hours per month remediating vulnerabilities](https://about.gitlab.com/resources/developer-survey/) post-release instead of shipping new work. Over half of organizations have at least one open internet-facing vulnerability, and the median time to close half of those is 361 days. Exploitation takes hours, while remediation takes months.\n\nAI-assisted development is widening the gap, and stakeholders know it. By June 2025, AI-generated code was adding over 10,000 new security findings per month across Fortune 50 repositories, a 10x jump from six months earlier. Georgia Tech identified 34 [CVEs attributable to AI-generated code](https://research.gatech.edu/bad-vibes-ai-generated-code-vulnerable-researchers-warn) in March 2026, up from 6 in January, and that count reflects only the ones where AI authorship is clear. AI coding assistants hallucinate package names, reach for outdated patterns, and copy insecure examples from training data. More code, more dependencies, and more vulnerabilities per line are generated faster than security teams can review them.\n\nDefenders need to harness frontier AI models, too — not bolted onto the SDLC as external tooling, but running inside the same policies, approvals, and audit trail as the rest of the team. \n\n## Security at the speed of AI coding\n\nWhen a critical CVE drops, how quickly can your team confirm which projects are affected? How many tools does an alert cross before a developer can submit a fix?\n\nThe teams that benefit most from AI already have policies, enforcement, and controls embedded in their development workflows. AI amplifies that foundation. It doesn't replace it.\n\n**Enforcement at the point of change.** As exploitation windows compress, every line of code entering a repository needs to pass through a defined set of controls. Not a separate review, in a different tool, by a different team. Organizations need the ability to enforce security policies across every group and project, with the merge request as the enforcement point. Policies defined once, applied everywhere, with exceptions reviewed, approved, and logged.\n\n**Simple issues caught before the merge request, not during.** Hardcoded secrets, known-vulnerable imports, and deprecated API calls can be flagged in the IDE before a developer pushes a commit. Catching them at authoring time means fewer findings blocking the MR, so review cycles go to the findings that require cross-component context: reachability, exploitability, and architectural risk.\n\n**Triage automated by default, not by exception.** Embedding security into every merge request creates a volume problem. More scans, more findings, more noise reaching developers who aren’t trained to distinguish a reachable critical from a theoretical one. AI must handle false positive detection, reachability, exploitability context, and severity assessment before a developer sees the finding, so the findings they see actually warrant their time.\n\n**Remediation governed like any other change.** AI-based remediation compresses the timeline for closing vulnerabilities, but every generated fix must move through the same governance as a human-authored change: policies enforce scans, the right reviewers approve, and evidence is recorded. GitLab’s automated remediation capability proposes each fix in a merge request with a confidence score. The MR records which policy applied, which scans ran, what they found, and who approved. Human code and AI-generated code move through the same process, with the same audit trail.\n\n## What a ready pipeline looks like\n\nHere's how these pieces work together when a high-severity vulnerability is discovered and the clock is running.\n\nA proof-of-concept exploit for a vulnerability in a popular open-source package appears on a security mailing list. There’s no CVE, no National Vulnerability Database (NVD) entry, and no scanner signature yet. The security team finds out the usual way: someone shares it in Slack.\n\nA security engineer asks the security agent if the package is in use, which projects have affected versions, and whether any vulnerable call paths are reachable in production. The agent checks the dependency graph for every project, matches the affected versions and entry points from the disclosure, and returns a ranked list of exposed projects with details about reachability. There’s no need to search through repositories by hand or wait for a scanner update. The question, \"Are we exposed?\" is answered in minutes.\n\nThe engineer starts a remediation campaign for every exposed project. The remediation agent suggests fixes: version updates where a patched release is available, and targeted call-path patches where it is not. Scan execution policies are already in place for projects tagged SOC 2. The engineer hardens the rules to block merges on any merge request that introduces or keeps the affected dependency, and an approval policy now requires security sign-off on every fix. The agent's first proposed patch fails the pipeline when an integration test catches a regression. The agent revises the patch based on the test failure, and the second attempt passes. Developers review the changes, security signs off under the stricter policy, and merges proceed across the campaign.\n\nAt the next audit review, the security team presents a report showing how policies were enforced and risks were reduced during the campaign. It includes scan results, policies applied, approvers, and merge timestamps for every MR in every affected project. The evidence was automatically generated in flight, not assembled after the fact.\n\n## Close the gaps now\n\nMythos exists today, and comparable models will be in attacker hands within a year. Every month between now and then is a chance to strengthen your software supply chain.\n\nAsk these questions about your pipeline:\n\n* How do you enforce that security scans run on every merge request, not just the projects where teams configured them?\n\n* If a compromised package entered your dependency tree today, would your pipeline catch it before build?\n\n* When a scanner flags a critical finding, how many tool boundaries does it cross before a developer starts the fix?\n\n* If an AI agent proposed a code fix for a vulnerability, what process would that fix go through before reaching production, and is that process auditable?\n\n* When auditors ask for evidence that a specific policy was enforced on a specific change, how long does it take to produce?\n\nIf the answers expose gaps, address them now. [Talk to a GitLab solutions architect](https://about.gitlab.com/sales/) about the role of security governance in your development lifecycle.",[723,9,532],"AI/ML","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1772195014/ooezwusxjl1f7ijfmbvj.png",{"featured":27,"template":13,"slug":726},"prepare-your-pipeline-for-ai-discovered-zero-days",{"content":728,"config":740},{"title":729,"description":730,"authors":731,"heroImage":733,"date":734,"category":9,"tags":735,"body":739},"Manage vulnerability noise at scale with auto-dismiss policies","Learn how to cut through scanner noise and focus on the vulnerabilities that matter most with GitLab security, including use cases and templates.",[732],"Grant Hickman","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1774375772/kpaaaiqhokevxxeoxvu0.png","2026-03-25",[9,736,564,737,738],"tutorial","features","product","Security scanners are essential, but not every finding requires action. Test code, vendored dependencies, generated files, and known false positives create noise that buries the vulnerabilities that actually matter. Security teams waste hours manually dismissing the same irrelevant findings across projects and pipelines. They experience slower triage, alert fatigue, and developer friction that undermines adoption of security scanning itself.\n\nGitLab's auto-dismiss vulnerability policies let you codify your triage decisions once and apply them automatically on every default-branch pipeline. Define criteria based on file path, directory, or vulnerability identifier (CVE, CWE), choose a dismissal reason, and let GitLab handle the rest.\n\n## Why auto-dismiss?\nAuto-dismiss vulnerability policies enable security teams to:\n- **Eliminate triage noise**: Automatically dismiss findings in test code, vendored dependencies, and generated files.\n- **Enforce decisions at scale**: Apply policies centrally to dismiss known false positives across your entire organization.\n- **Maintain audit transparency**: Every auto-dismissed finding includes a documented reason and links back to the policy that triggered it.\n- **Preserve the record**: Unlike scanner exclusions, dismissed vulnerabilities remain in your report, so you can revisit decisions if conditions change.\n\n## How auto-dismiss policies work\n\n1. **Define your policy** in a vulnerability management policy YAML file. Specify match criteria (file path, directory, or identifier) and a dismissal reason.\n\n2. **Merge and activate.** Create the policy via **Secure > Policies > New  policy > Vulnerability management policy**. Merge the MR to enable it.\n3. **Run your pipeline.** On every default-branch pipeline, matching vulnerabilities are automatically set to \"Dismissed\" with the specified reason. Up to 1,000 vulnerabilities are processed per run.\n4. **Measure the impact.** Filter your vulnerability report by status \"Dismissed\" to see exactly what was cleaned up and validate that the right findings are being handled.\n\n## Use cases with ready-to-use configurations\n\nEach example below includes a policy configuration you can copy, customize, and apply immediately.\n\n### 1. Dismiss test code vulnerabilities\n\nSAST and dependency scanners flag hardcoded credentials, insecure fixtures, and dev-only dependencies in test directories. These are not production risks.\n\n```yaml\nvulnerability_management_policy:\n  - name: \"Dismiss test code vulnerabilities\"\n    description: \"Auto-dismiss findings in test directories\"\n    enabled: true\n    rules:\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: file_path\n            value: \"test/**/*\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: file_path\n            value: \"tests/**/*\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: file_path\n            value: \"spec/**/*\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: directory\n            value: \"__tests__/*\"\n    actions:\n      - type: auto_dismiss\n        dismissal_reason: used_in_tests\n\n```\n\n### 2. Dismiss vendored and third-party code\n\nVulnerabilities in `vendor/`, `third_party/`, or checked-in `node_modules` are managed upstream and not actionable for your team.\n\n```yaml\nvulnerability_management_policy:\n  - name: \"Dismiss vendored dependency findings\"\n    description: \"Findings in vendored code are managed upstream\"\n    enabled: true\n    rules:\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: directory\n            value: \"vendor/*\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: directory\n            value: \"third_party/*\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: directory\n            value: \"vendored/*\"\n    actions:\n      - type: auto_dismiss\n        dismissal_reason: not_applicable\n\n```\n\n### 3. Dismiss known false positive CVEs\n\nCertain CVEs are repeatedly flagged but don't apply to your usage context. Teams dismiss these manually every time they appear. Replace the example CVEs below with your own.\n\n```yaml\nvulnerability_management_policy:\n  - name: \"Dismiss known false positive CVEs\"\n    description: \"CVEs confirmed as false positives for our environment\"\n    enabled: true\n    rules:\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: identifier\n            value: \"CVE-2023-44487\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: identifier\n            value: \"CVE-2024-29041\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: identifier\n            value: \"CVE-2023-26136\"\n    actions:\n      - type: auto_dismiss\n        dismissal_reason: false_positive\n\n```\n\n### 4. Dismiss generated and auto-created code\n\nProtobuf, gRPC, OpenAPI generators, and ORM scaffolding tools produce files with flagged patterns that cannot be patched by your team.\n\n```yaml\nvulnerability_management_policy:\n  - name: \"Dismiss generated code findings\"\n    description: \"Generated files are not authored by us\"\n    enabled: true\n    rules:\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: directory\n            value: \"generated/*\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: file_path\n            value: \"**/*.pb.go\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: file_path\n            value: \"**/*.generated.*\"\n    actions:\n      - type: auto_dismiss\n        dismissal_reason: not_applicable\n\n```\n\n### 5. Dismiss infrastructure-mitigated vulnerabilities\n\nVulnerability classes like XSS (CWE-79) or SQL injection (CWE-89) that are already addressed by WAF rules or runtime protection. Only use this when mitigating controls are verified and consistently enforced.\n\n```yaml\nvulnerability_management_policy:\n  - name: \"Dismiss CWEs mitigated by WAF\"\n    description: \"XSS and SQLi mitigated by WAF rules\"\n    enabled: true\n    rules:\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: identifier\n            value: \"CWE-79\"\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: identifier\n            value: \"CWE-89\"\n    actions:\n      - type: auto_dismiss\n        dismissal_reason: mitigating_control\n\n```\n\n### 6. Dismiss CVE families across your organization\n\nA wave of related CVEs for a widely-used library your team has assessed? Apply at the group level to dismiss them across dozens of projects. The wildcard pattern (e.g., `CVE-2021-44*`) matches all CVEs with that prefix.\n\n```yaml\nvulnerability_management_policy:\n  - name: \"Accept risk for log4j CVE family\"\n    description: \"Log4j CVEs mitigated by version pinning and WAF\"\n    enabled: true\n    rules:\n      - type: detected\n        criteria:\n          - type: identifier\n            value: \"CVE-2021-44*\"\n    actions:\n      - type: auto_dismiss\n        dismissal_reason: acceptable_risk\n\n```\n\n## Quick reference\n\n| Parameter | Details |\n|-----------|---------|\n| **Criteria types** | `file_path` (glob patterns, e.g., `test/**/*`), `directory` (e.g., `vendor/*`), `identifier` (CVE/CWE with wildcards, e.g., `CVE-2023-*`) |\n| **Dismissal reasons** | `acceptable_risk`, `false_positive`, `mitigating_control`, `used_in_tests`, `not_applicable` |\n| **Criteria logic** | Multiple criteria within a rule = AND (must match all). Multiple rules within a policy = OR (match any). |\n| **Limits** | 3 criteria per rule, 5 rules per policy, 5 policies per security policy project. Vulnerabilty management policy actions process 1000 vulnerabilities per pipeline run in the target project, until all matching vulnerabilities are processed. |\n| **Affected statuses** | Needs triage, Confirmed |\n| **Scope** | Project-level or group-level (group-level applies across all projects) |\n\n## Getting started\nHere's how to get started with auto-dismiss policies:\n\n1. **Identify the noise.** Open your vulnerability report and sort by \"Needs triage.\" Look for patterns: test files, vendored code, the same CVE across projects.\n\n2. **Pick a scenario.** Start with whichever use case above accounts for the most findings.\n\n3. **Record your baseline.** Note the number of \"Needs triage\" vulnerabilities before creating a policy.\n\n4. **Create and enable.** Navigate to **Secure > Policies > New policy > Vulnerability management policy**. Paste the configuration from the use case above, then merge the MR.\n\n5. **Validate results.** After the next default-branch pipeline, filter by status \"Dismissed\" to confirm the right findings were handled.\n\nFor full configuration details, see the [vulnerability management policy documentation](https://docs.gitlab.com/user/application_security/policies/vulnerability_management_policy/#auto-dismiss-policies).\n\n> Ready to take control of vulnerability noise? [Start a free GitLab Ultimate trial](https://about.gitlab.com/free-trial/) and configure your first auto-dismiss policy today.\n",{"slug":741,"featured":27,"template":13},"auto-dismiss-vulnerability-management-policy",{"content":743,"config":752},{"title":744,"description":745,"authors":746,"heroImage":748,"date":749,"body":750,"category":9,"tags":751},"GitLab 18.10 brings AI-native triage and remediation ","Learn about GitLab Duo Agent Platform capabilities that cut noise, surface real vulnerabilities, and turn findings into proposed fixes.",[747],"Alisa Ho","https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1773843921/rm35fx4gylrsu9alf2fx.png","2026-03-19","GitLab 18.10 introduces new AI-powered security capabilities focused on improving the quality and speed of vulnerability management. Together, these features can help reduce the time developers spend investigating false positives and bring automated remediation directly into their workflow, so they can fix vulnerabilities without needing to be security experts.\n\nHere is what’s new:\n\n* [**Static Application Security Testing (SAST) false positive detection**](https://docs.gitlab.com/user/application_security/vulnerabilities/false_positive_detection/) **is now generally available.** This flow uses an LLM for agentic reasoning to determine the likelihood that a vulnerability is a false positive or not, so security and development teams can focus on remediating critical vulnerabilities first.  \n* [**Agentic SAST vulnerability resolution**](https://docs.gitlab.com/user/application_security/vulnerabilities/agentic_vulnerability_resolution/) **is now in beta.** Agentic SAST vulnerability resolution automatically creates a merge request with a proposed fix for verified SAST vulnerabilities, which can shorten time to remediation and reduce the need for deep security expertise.  \n* [**Secret false positive detection**](https://docs.gitlab.com/user/application_security/vulnerabilities/secret_false_positive_detection/) **is now in beta.** This flow brings the same AI-powered noise reduction to secret detection, flagging dummy and test secrets to save review effort.\n\nThese flows are available to GitLab Ultimate customers using GitLab Duo Agent Platform. \n\n## Cut triage time with SAST false positive detection\n\nTraditional SAST scanners flag every suspicious code pattern they find, regardless of whether code paths are reachable or frameworks already handle the risk. Without runtime context, they cannot distinguish a real vulnerability from safe code that just looks dangerous.\n\nThis means developers could spend hours investigating findings that turn out to be false positives. Over time, that can erode confidence in the report and slow down the teams responsible for fixing real risks.\n\nAfter each SAST scan, GitLab Duo Agent Platform automatically analyzes new critical and high severity findings and attaches:\n\n* A confidence score indicating how likely the finding is to be a false positive  \n* An AI-generated explanation describing the reasoning  \n* A visual badge that makes “Likely false positive” versus “Likely real” easy to scan in the UI\n\nThese findings appear in the [Vulnerability Report](https://docs.gitlab.com/user/application_security/vulnerability_report/), as shown below. You can filter the report to focus on findings marked as “Not false positive” so teams can spend their time addressing real vulnerabilities instead of sifting through noise.\n\n![Vulnerability report](https://res.cloudinary.com/about-gitlab-com/image/upload/v1773844787/i0eod01p7gawflllkgsr.png)\n\n\nGitLab Duo Agent Platform's assessment is a recommendation. You stay in control of every false positive to determine if it is valid, and you can audit the agent's reasoning at any time to build confidence in the model. \n\n\n## Turn vulnerabilities into automated fixes\n\nKnowing that a vulnerability is real is only half the work.  Remediation still requires understanding the code path, writing a safe patch, and making sure nothing else breaks.\n\nIf the vulnerability is identified as likely not be a false positive by the SAST false positive detection flow, the Agentic SAST vulnerability resolution flow automatically:\n\n1. Reads the vulnerable code and surrounding context from your repository  \n2. Generates high-quality proposed fixes  \n3. Validates fixes through automated testing   \n4. Opens a merge request with a proposed fix that includes:  \n   * Concrete code changes  \n   * A confidence score  \n   * An explanation of what changed and why\n\nIn this demo, you’ll see how GitLab can automatically take a SAST vulnerability all the way from detection to a ready-to-review merge request. Watch how the agent reads the code, generates and validates a fix, and opens an MR with clear, explainable changes so developers can remediate faster without being security experts.\n\n\u003Ciframe src=\"https://player.vimeo.com/video/1174573325?badge=0&amp;autopause=0&amp;player_id=0&amp;app_id=58479\" frameborder=\"0\" allow=\"autoplay; fullscreen; picture-in-picture; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; web-share\" referrerpolicy=\"strict-origin-when-cross-origin\" style=\"position:absolute;top:0;left:0;width:100%;height:100%;\" title=\"GitLab 18.10 AI SAST False Positive Auto Remediation\">\u003C/iframe>\u003Cscript src=\"https://player.vimeo.com/api/player.js\">\u003C/script>\n\nAs with any AI-generated suggestion, you should review the proposed merge request carefully before merging.\n\n## Surface real secrets\n\nSecret detection is only useful if teams trust the results. When reports are full of test credentials, placeholder values, and example tokens, developers may waste time reviewing noise instead of fixing real exposures. That can slow remediation and decrease confidence in the scan.\n\nSecret false positive detection helps teams focus on the secrets that matter so they can reduce risk faster. When it runs on the default branch, it will automatically:\n\n1. Analyze each finding to spot likely test credentials, example values, and dummy secrets  \n2. Assign a confidence score for whether the finding is a real risk or a likely false positive  \n3. Generate an explanation for why the secret is being treated as real or noise  \n4. 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