The Advisory Committee on Data for Evidence Building, in a meeting Friday, outlined its recommendations to create a National Secure Data Service, which would give vetted researchers access to sensitive government data for statistical purposes.
The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board currently lacks the membership necessary to issue reports and start new projects.
Illegal fishing is bad, not just for fish populations. It can threaten food supplies, the marine ecosystem, even geopolitical stability.
For several years, agency acquisition shops have been getting more comfortable with buying outside of the Federal Acquisition Regulation.
As encrypted ledger technology continues to creep into the federal government, new legislation would prepare agencies for further adoption.
For what it's all about, Federal Drive with Tom Temin turned to the the director of the Law Library editorial and publishing office, Luis Acosta, and law library senior legal information specialist, Stephen Mayeaux.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration says a high number of IT workers at the IRS are eligible to retirement.
A series of bills making their way through Congress look to improve agency cybersecurity, location and contractor relations.
Steven Burke, of the Council of Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, said one of the ways to overcome those challenges is with good business relationships among government customers and external data owners.
Data is a blessing and a curse, but some entities are using it successfully, and changing their approach.
Congress is doling out money wholesale, including to the still young Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, part of the Department of Homeland Security.
The Technology Modernization Fund board says the $9.6 million loan will help mission areas deploy resources more effectively.
House Oversight and Reform Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) introduced new legislation designed to make presidential records more easily searchable and accessible.
The document was not only for its employees and other agencies the DIA works with — it was also a message to vendors and other partners on what the needs are and how they can help.
Freedom of Information Act requests are on the rise. Rising faster are instances of federal agencies turning them down.