Change What's Possible Webinar Series
Virtual Event: Learn how Viper with MATRIX can accelerate your DevSecOps cycle for building more secure mobile applications. Automate your routine mobile application security testing, even runtime testing, and spend your time investigating the vulnerabilities and exploits that matter most.
The market definition of application security continues to change, and so do the platforms and tools that developers, testers, and security teams use to develop mobile applications.
As application security messaging transforms from API security to application security posture management (ASPM), and now to runtime application security and application detection and response, it is important to understand how to develop securely.
The pressure to choose speed over security for mobile applications development means the use of code libraries and SDKs which can increase risk, especially around data security and compliance
Join us to learn how Corellium Viper with MATRIX is helping teams build secure mobile applications and see how your team can automate routine tasks and accelerate time to remediation.
You Will Learn How You Can Use Corellium Viper with MATRIX To:
- Create a virtual device in three clicks with any OS and Device combination for testing
- Upload your application and run automated testing instead of manual OWASP checks
- Prioritize remediation with detailed evidence to help resolve the issues that matter most
Date: June 25th, 2025 at 11am ET
Change What's Possible is our ongoing series of events designed for mobile security professionals. During each session, members of the Corellium team will discuss how virtual devices can advance mobile cybersecurity research and testing.
Speakers
Scott Mercer, Systems Engineer Corellium
Scott is an experienced Systems Engineer with a strong background in mobile development, testing, and security. At mobile-focused startups, he has helped Fortune 500 teams adopt secure mobile testing workflows and streamline AppSec validation. He holds a degree in Computer Engineering from the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley.