RunSafe Security spent the week spotlighting its role in addressing software bill of materials, or SBOM, challenges in the automotive and embedded sectors. The company is promoting a March 24 industry roundtable aimed at real-world SBOM issues, including undocumented components, gaps across build systems, and misunderstandings around static versus dynamic linking.
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RunSafe is positioning the session to tackle documentation drift between software builds and SBOM records, alongside how to define useful security and compliance metrics without slowing development. By convening practitioners focused on SBOM integrity, regulatory compliance, and development velocity, the company is seeking deeper engagement with automotive engineering, security teams, and supply chain stakeholders.
Recent communications also emphasize RunSafe’s broader thought-leadership push in embedded cybersecurity and compliance-driven resilience. Through its “Exploited: The Cyber Truth” podcast and Embedded Security Insights newsletter, the firm has highlighted NIST-aligned frameworks, continuous monitoring, and open-source risks that expand attack surfaces and increase the need for disciplined SBOM practices.
In parallel, RunSafe is promoting a March 24 automotive cybersecurity webinar featuring industry speakers from May Mobility, HARMAN International, and The Product Cybersecurity Group. Topics include SBOM gaps, open-source license exposure, and how GPL and AGPL obligations can propagate via transitive dependencies in complex automotive software stacks.
The webinar will also explore integrating license checks and compliance controls into CI/CD pipelines, underscoring a shift toward embedding security and licensing governance earlier in the development lifecycle. Collectively, these initiatives reinforce RunSafe’s market positioning at the intersection of embedded security, software supply chain risk management, and regulatory-grade compliance in high-value automotive and safety-critical markets.
While the latest updates are primarily educational and promotional rather than tied to specific contracts or financial milestones, they support brand visibility and could strengthen lead generation with automotive OEMs and suppliers. Overall, the week underscored RunSafe Security’s strategic focus on SBOM trustworthiness and supply chain assurance as regulatory and customer scrutiny of software components continues to intensify.

