Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

hosang I.T.

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Docker joins the Athena coalition: a cross-industry collaboration for supply chain security

The obvious takeaway from 2026’s biggest incidents is that attackers are increasingly using AI to move fast. Docker’s CISO, Mark Lechner, wrote about this shift and what every engineering team should do now.

What worries us is that the bar is about to drop further. For most of the last decade, finding a serious vulnerability in widely used open source took time and specialized skill. Frontier models now read code, reason across dependencies, and surface novel, chained vulnerabilities at machine speed, including flaws that survived years of expert review. Anthropic’s Mythos, and the more powerful models that follow it will find more vulnerabilities, faster, and by a wider margin than skilled humans could. The gap between a vulnerability being discovered and exploited has shrunk from years to hours, and a growing share are weaponized before they are ever public.

We believe the durable response in this reality is twofold: build products that are secure and transparent by default, and collaborate deeply across the ecosystem to share signals and intelligence. No single vendor sees the whole picture, and customers are best protected when supply chain technologies work together rather than in isolation.

Secure-by-default tools for devs, as AI embeds into the SDLC

As coding agents take on more of the software lifecycle, secure defaults have to cover more than what you build with. They have to cover where agents run and what they can reach. Today, Docker’s investment spans three areas covering sandboxes for local developers, secure dependencies, and governed access to vetted MCP tools. These capabilities and our upcoming products in the near future collectively help secure the developer environment as AI embeds itself into the SDLC:

Isolated, sandboxed execution for agents: Docker Sandboxes run AI coding agents in isolated microVMs, each with its own kernel, filesystem, and deny-by-default network, so a compromised dependency an agent pulls cannot reach the host, its credentials, or other workloads.

Trusted, open source foundations: Docker Hardened Images Community is free and open source under Apache 2.0. DHI are minimal, low-CVE images rebuilt from source with SLSA Build Level 3 provenance and signed SBOMs, built on Alpine and Debian. The catalog now spans over 3,500 hardened images and tens of thousands of hardened system packages, extending across container images, system packages, Helm charts, and MCP servers. DHI makes secure dependencies the easy, default choice.

Governed access to tools: Docker MCP Catalog and Gateway give agents a trusted, hardened set of MCP servers, plus centralized policy, secret blocking, and audit logging, so the connections agents make are verified rather than assumed.

Together these tools give developers a secure default from the first docker build through to the agent running in their environment. 

Working with the ecosystem on behalf of every developer

The second part of our approach is how we work with the ecosystem. For example, with the axios compromise earlier this year and the TeamPCP campaign, Docker worked with partners including Socket, the Trivy team, Checkmarx, and others to analyze the attacks and contain the blast radius (recap). The damage potential with these attacks could have been very large, however sharing signals across company lines, in real time, is what kept the blast radius relatively small. We have said it before, this is a posture we believe the ecosystem needs more of.

Docker is joining the Athena alliance

Athena is the next step in our journey of collaboration. Announced today, it is an industry coalition for the coordinated defense of open source software in the era of AI-accelerated vulnerability discovery, and Docker is a founding participant. Athena brings together organizations from across the software ecosystem to share findings and coordinate responses before vulnerabilities become public. Docker sits at a distinctive point in the supply chain, with millions of developers relying on us to build, distribute, and run software built on open source, so helping make that ecosystem more resilient is consistent with our mission. We look forward to working with the coalition on key ways in which Docker is uniquely placed to provide expertise and scale to this important cross-industry effort.

Further reading

View the full article

User Feedback

Recommended Comments

There are no comments to display.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Add a comment...

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.