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Even though achieving CSF compliance can take serious consideration and time, many international players have recently begun leveraging the framework, thanks in part to new efforts from NIST.
The department enlisted the MITRE Corporation to help foreign governments assess their own cybersecurity.
After several years, a consortium of agencies has been working on FedRAMP, a program to certify cybersecurity of cloud computing services providers.
Neha Anand, group product manager at Okta, offers four predictions for technology trends in the government sector in the new year.
Ron Lopez, president and managing director of Astroscale USA, joins host John Gilroy on this week's Federal Tech Talk to discuss orbital sustainability and how his company is leading the effort in space debris removal.
The cybersecurity environment has shifted dramatically in recent years, and that means yesterday’s tools and approaches – especially those which rely upon manual and/or siloed processes – will no longer suffice.
The federal government is making strides with the OPEN Government Data Act, which demonstrates the critical role data plays in future innovation.
DISA, cybersecurity and non-CIOs talking tech seemed to draw the interest of Federal News Network listeners and readers in 2019 on the Ask the CIO show.
Rick "Ozzie" Nelson, vice president and general manager for the Public Sector at MicroStrategy, joins host John Gilroy on this week's Federal Tech Talk to talk about business intelligence and how it is being used to analzye complex problems in the federal government.
As we head into 2020, federal, state and local agencies will continue to be a prime target for cyber attacks.
There is no magic silver bullet for cybersecurity—but hard work and discipline can make things a lot easier to manage.
Shane Barney, the chief Information Security Officer at USCIS, and Togi Andrews, the CISO at FEMA, say automation and reskilling of the workforce is part of how they are evolving their security operations centers.
The 2020 spending bills urge the Social Security Administration to reinstate its telework program for operations employees, but they're silent on collective bargaining protections and funding for the Bureau of Land Management's upcoming relocation.
In today's Federal Newscast, if the fiscal 2020 budget deal gets signed into law, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency will receive $2 billion, $334 million more than it received in 2019.
Weekly interviews with federal agency chief information officers about the latest directives, challenges and successes. Follow Jason on Twitter. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Podcast One.