Not even a platoon of Evelyn Woods could get through this mountain of classified material every year.
Lee Koepping and Greg Mundell, both of ScienceLogic, make the case for how artificial intelligence and machine learning can help drive IT modernization.
The Information Security Oversight Office's annual report offers 13 recommendations for how to handle classified information.
The Veterans Affairs Department released a series of procurement actions over the last month to improve how it manages and gets more use of its cloud.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center is leading a call on the White House to establish policy for artificial intelligence.
An internal poll of FBI employees has revealed a striking drop in confidence in the vision of FBI Director Christopher Wray and the bureau's senior leadership.
What is currently driving the mergers and acquisitions activity in the government contracting market? Find out when Washington Technology Editor Nick Wakeman joins host Mark Amtower on this week's Amtower Off Center. July 16, 2018
A study by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine finds, maybe the Federal Aviation Administration is a little too cautious in trying to develop regulations.
Some federal leaders and lawmakers think now is precisely the time to be considering the implications of artificial intelligence.
The Air Force is considering bringing back old planes to serve as drones.
Troy Harper, the general manager of the public sector for OnSolve, offers advice for how agencies can be more proactive during times of emergency.
As the Army shifts its focus from violent extremist organizations to near-peer adversaries per the national defense strategy, staying on top of emerging domains and technologies will be what keeps it in a position of dominance going into the future.
The newest director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office spoke about signing the nation's 10 millionth patent and a years-long backlog of patent applications.
Tom Ruff, the vice president of public sector for Akamai, makes the case for more funding, education and the managing of bots.
With all the buzz surrounding artificial intelligence, officials at NASA say the technology is helping employees get their arms around all of their data, but the emerging technology isn't going to put rocket scientists out of job anytime soon.