Verisign
Java Software Engineer
Reston,Virginia,United States$89.9k–$121.7kmidAdded today
About this role
Verisign seeks a Junior Java Software Engineer to join the Name Studio API team, developing cloud-based domain recommendation systems using machine learning and LLMs. You'll work across the full software development lifecycle, collaborating with product and operations teams to build high-performance, globally-scaled services.
What you'll do
- Develop proof-of-concept applications based on research findings and ML/LLM innovations
- Design and implement Java Spring Boot features for the domain suggestion API platform
- Collaborate with Product, Security, and Operations teams on requirements, design, and code reviews
- Contribute to cloud-based initiatives leveraging AWS and large language models
- Participate in full development lifecycle from ideation through deployment and issue resolution
- Work with Hadoop/Spark clusters and implement automated testing frameworks
What they're looking for
- Java and Spring Boot development
- AWS Cloud services
- Machine Learning and LLM concepts
- Natural Language Processing fundamentals
- UNIX-like operating systems
- Secure coding practices
- Git/GitHub and CI/CD pipelines (Jenkins, Terraform, Ansible)
- Scrum and Agile methodologies
Benefits
- Hybrid work schedule from Reston, VA office
- Competitive benefits package
- Career growth opportunities
- Work on mission-critical internet infrastructure
- Dynamic startup-like team environment
- Access to advanced tools: Hadoop, Spark, AWS, LLMs
Opens the official application on the employer’s site. No login required.
Verisign
Verisign builds internet infrastructure and resolution products that ensure stable, secure operations at scale. The company is hiring software engineers, site reliability engineers, and automation specialists to design, develop, and maintain their platforms and services.
- Website
- verisign.com
Likely interview questions
- Tell us about a proof-of-concept or prototype you built and the challenges you faced in transitioning it to production.
- How have you approached learning a new technology or framework when it wasn't part of your formal experience?