Google - Eliminating Memory Safety Vulnerabilities at the Source

Memory safety vulnerabilities remain a pervasive threat to software security. At Google, we believe the path to eliminating this class of vulnerabilities at scale and building high-assurance software lies in Safe Coding, a secure-by-design approach that prioritizes transitioning to memory-safe languages.

This post demonstrates why focusing on Safe Coding for new code quickly and counterintuitively reduces the overall security risk of a codebase, finally breaking through the stubbornly high plateau of memory safety vulnerabilities and starting an exponential decline, all while being scalable and cost-effective.

We’ll also share updated data on how the percentage of memory safety vulnerabilities in Android dropped from 76% to 24% over 6 years as development shifted to memory safe languages.

Based on what we’ve learned, it's become clear that we do not need to throw away or rewrite all our existing memory-unsafe code. Instead, Android is focusing on making interoperability safe and convenient as a primary capability in our memory safety journey. Interoperability offers a practical and incremental approach to adopting memory safe languages, allowing organizations to leverage existing investments in code and systems, while accelerating the development of new features.

We recommend focusing investments on improving interoperability, as we are doing with Rust ↔︎ C++ and Rust ↔︎ Kotlin. To that end, earlier this year, Google provided a $1,000,000 grant to the Rust Foundation, in addition to developing interoperability tooling like Crubit and autocxx.

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