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GAO ranked 10 federal systems in most need of modernization and they range from 8-to-51 years old and cost about $337 million annually to maintain.
As part DoD’s move to shore up its supply chain, the Pentagon is developing with industry and other experts a new cybersecurity maturity model that is borrowing from standards like ISO 9000.
The Pentagon has long said that one of its biggest cybersecurity challenges is fragmentation of its networks.
In today's Federal Newscast, two bills to protect federal employees' health insurance benefits during future government shutdowns advanced to the full House for a vote.
Mark Testoni, CEO of SAP National Security Services, joined host John Gilroy on this week's Federal Tech Talk to discuss how new technologies can help federal agencies solve their most complicated cybersecurity problems.
Bob Stevens, vice president of the Americas at Lookout, explained why agencies need to focus on mobile endpoint security.
In today's Federal Newscast, a provision in the annual Defense bill the Senate Armed Services Committee released this week would order a top-to-bottom review of the contractor, civilian and military IT positions in each military service and DoD agency.
NSA’s six-year-old program challenges students and others to solve a multi-step cybersecurity problem as a way to expose them to the type of work the agency and the government does.
ACT-IAC has teamed up with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to advance ICAM best practices.
The Project on Government Oversight has been following the privacy issues associated with facial recognition.
Texas Rep. Michael McCaul's bill would create groups of cyber first responders in the event of a cyber attack on the government or private sector.
Leslie Weinstein, an Army Reserve officer and consultant for DoD, explains why the Pentagon should follow other sectors and use experts to ensure vendors are meeting cyber requirements.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection service says images of travelers and license plates have been exposed in a cyberattack
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's inspector general found a third of its inspectors will be eligible to retire in 2020.
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.