Close to 20 agencies have stood up their own continuous diagnostics and mitigation dashboards, as the Homeland Security Department will soon launch the federal version.
The Marine Corps wants to add cyber training to boot camp and has new incentives for civilian hires.
Given the Trump administration's executive order on cyber and guidelines from the Commerce Department, contractors have a list of questions they need to ask themselves.
Federal information technology executives are tasked with managing the data inundation and cyber threats they encounter on a daily basis, often with limited resources, both from a budgetary and skilled personnel perspective. Federal News Radio recently spoke with Steve Hull, chief information officer at Leidos, to address these issues and more.
The Homeland Security Department and the National Institute of Standards and Technology sponsor the Global City Teams Challenge to help cities design in cybersecurity.
Booz Allen Hamilton's Brian Abbe, Troy Abbot and Eric Billies join host Roger Waldron on this week's Off the Shelf to discuss the government's growing use of unmanned systems. October 3, 2017
Brian Burns, the Coast Guard’s acting chief information officer, said the service is on schedule to move to Windows 10 by March 2018.
After two delays, DoD says it should be able to deliver the long awaited cyber deterrence policy by Sept. 30.
Howard Whyte, FDIC’s chief information security officer (CISO), will serve as acting CIO starting Oct. 1.
Massive database will be the child of the Securities and Exchange Commission and contractor, Delaware LLC, and a dozen exchanges.
The Securities and Exchange Commission chairman told senators Tuesday that the agency needs to keep its long-term IT modernization fund in order to defend against future cyber breaches.
The two entities learned of the breaches eventually, but they didn't rush to ring the bell and notify anyone.
A new survey from Grant Thornton and the Professional Services Council highlights continued challenges federal CIOs face.
Max Everett, the Energy Department's chief information officer, said the agency can help secure and improve the technology behind the Internet of Things.
Amid the "chaos and complexity" of the Internet of Things are basic cybersecurity rules agencies can follow to secure devices but not suffocate innovation.