Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Congress' first order of business, at least in the House, is a resolution against the president's emergency declaration to proceed with the border wall. The Firewall's Editor in Chief David Hawkings joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin to discuss more.
To affect the most millions of people takes internet companies like Facebook. Yet the Government Accountability Office said the U.S. really doesn't have comprehensive internet privacy laws.
You might not wake up thinking about routing control plane anomalies, prefix hijacking and route leaks. But your agency network administrators do, or should.
In today's Federal Newscast, the National Treasury Employees Union asked the Office of Personnel Management when federal employees can expect to see the 1.9 percent pay raise recently signed into law.
In response to rats, mold and lead paint in housing, military services are conducting checks and inspections for families.
The fiscal 2019 spending bill increases funding for the continuous diagnostics and mitigation (CDM) program by more than $37 million.
In today's Federal Newscast, after the National Coalition for Men sued, a federal district judge ruled in its favor, saying forcing only men to register for the Selective Service is unfair.
The Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity was only supposed to last 90 days but ended up clocking 5,000.
A low level debate is rumbling within the Defense Department and with its contractors having to do with progress and performance based payments.
The Department of Homeland Security inspector general found that ICE officials don't use the contracting power they have to enforce the standards.
The Trump administration released its first — but the U.S. government's fourth — National Action Plan for Open Government Thursday night, more than a year after the original deadline from the international Open Government Partnership.
Skeletons and fossils in museum cases look like interesting artifacts to most of us, but to Anna "Kay" Behrensmeyer at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History they tell deep stories.
The government can't shut down again until September but that may not be reassuring. For many federal employees, the last event produced a permanent sense of uncertainty.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said it now has the capability to make its charge processing and records system fully digital.