Lou Kerestesy, founder and CEO of GovInnovators, offers several considerations for agencies as they begin the process of deciding business objectives and how best to orient the center to them.
Federal Drive with Tom Temin spoke with Mark Schwartz, the chief information officer of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, about the 75 systems he's charged with overseeing and modernizing.
China, Russia and Iran are all working on so-called anti-access and area-denial capabilities and missile systems aimed at neutralizing U.S. carriers. That's according to a new study by the Center for a New American Security. For details, Federal Drive with Tom Temin spoke to principal author Kelley Sayler.
The Defense Department announced it would be launching the federal government’s first-ever “bug bounty,” banking on the idea that there’s a nascent community of white hat hackers that's been itching to help the Pentagon with its cybersecurity challenges.
The Navy Department is making it clear that military members and civilians can be reassigned or dismissed from government service altogether if they don’t stay current on their cyber defense training.
The Office of Management and Budget’s new draft policy recognizes the data center consolidation and optimization initiative must fold in several ongoing priorities — from infrastructure and systems modernization, to cybersecurity, cloud first, and the greening of the government — to be more effective.
With several high profile CIO positions open, agencies need to consider what type of person they want to hire. A Brookings scholar is arguing against a high-profile outsider.
The Air Force and FBI are adapting their approaches to enterprise IT to become more agile.