S3C2 Summit 2025-03: Industry Secure Supply Chain Summit
Elizabeth Lin, Jonah Ghebremichael, William Enck, Yasemin Acar, Michel Cukier, Alexandros Kapravelos, Christian Kastner, Laurie Williams

TL;DR
This paper summarizes a 2025 summit on software supply chain security, highlighting industry challenges, collaborative efforts, and open research questions in securing software supply chains against cyber threats.
Contribution
It reports on a collaborative summit with industry and government participants, identifying key challenges and open questions in software supply chain security.
Findings
Identified key challenges in SBOMs, compliance, malicious commits, build infrastructure, culture, and LLMs.
Facilitated industry-government collaboration and knowledge sharing.
Outlined open research questions for future work.
Abstract
Software supply chains, while providing immense economic and software development value, are only as strong as their weakest link. Over the past several years, there has been an exponential increase in cyberattacks specifically targeting vulnerable links in critical software supply chains. These attacks disrupt the day-to-day functioning and threaten the security of nearly everyone on the internet, from billion-dollar companies and government agencies to hobbyist open-source developers. The ever-evolving threat of software supply chain attacks has garnered interest from both the software industry and US government in improving software supply chain security. On Thursday, March 6th, 2025, four researchers from the NSF-backed Secure Software Supply Chain Center (S3C2) conducted a Secure Software Supply Chain Summit with a diverse set of 18 practitioners from 17 organizations. The goals of…
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