October 27th, 2010 Representative Jim Langevin of Rhode Island and the Honorable Tom Davis discuss the reform of the 2002 Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) and the pending Congressional Cybersecurity bills.
Venable\'s Rob Burton and Federal News Radio\'s Jason Miller count down their choices for the three most important Federal news stories of the week.
A hacking competition seeks to find coders who can break the system and then recruit them to cyber security.
Congress is slated to return for a lame duck session two weeks after next Tuesday\'s elections, but no action is expected until January at the earliest.
Host Tom Temin discusses the Navy\'s cybersecurity recruiting process with Kevin Cooley, the command information officer at the Navy Cyber Command. October 28, 2010
Cloud provider Verizon says cloud storage is safer.
Richard Spires says reticence over private sector social network access from within government networks is not because the department thinks sites such as Facebook are frivolous.
Pat Clawson, Chairman and CEO of Lumension joins Francis Rose on InDepth
One of the World\'s Foremost Experts in Advanced Threat and Malware Analysis Joins Terremark\'s Industry-Leading Group of Information Security Professionals
With Congress set to return for a lame-duck session after the elections, it is unclear whether lawmakers will have the time or inclination to pass a comprehensive cybersecurity bill. Some experts are calling for Congress to address at least some of the most important aspects if they can\'t agree on a larger bill.
Host John Gilroy speaks with Robert Rodriguez, CEO of the Security Innovation Network (SINET) on the organization\'s SINET Showcase. October 26, 2010
Seymour Hersh writes in the New Yorker about the EP-3E debacle that has fueled a debate on whether the military or civilians should take the lead in cybersecurity.
Mobile security has become a growing concern among Australian consumers and companies.
While Transportation officials say they haven\'t detected any incidents, but it isn\'t clear whether DOT\'s security problems could impact Recovery.gov or FederalReporting.gov.