According to a recent LinkedIn post from HeroDevs, the company is promoting a Never-Ending Support, or NES, offering for .NET containers once Microsoft’s official support ends. The post suggests that containerization can obscure ongoing security risk, as end-of-life .NET code may continue to run without future security patches while compliance obligations persist.
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The post highlights that NES for .NET containers is positioned to provide secure, drop-in images with continuing CVE remediation, allowing development teams more time to plan modernization and migration. For investors, this framing points to a recurring-revenue style security and maintenance service that targets organizations locked into legacy .NET workloads, potentially deepening HeroDevs’ role in the application security and DevSecOps ecosystem.
By emphasizing compliance and vulnerability management for end-of-life software, the post implies a focus on regulated and risk-sensitive customers that may value long-term support contracts. If adoption scales, this type of offering could extend HeroDevs’ customer lifecycle, increase switching costs, and create cross-sell opportunities into adjacent modernization or support services in the .NET and open-source infrastructure markets.

