The federal employment question forms a knot that remains difficult to untie.
The 2020 president's budget request keeps federal IT spending in 2020 about level with 2019. And the Analytical Perspectives on the budget released Monday indicate all is not well.
A hair-raising report to Navy Secretary Richard Spencer was leaked, and it presents a grim picture of America's cybersecurity threat.
Members of Congress may be rude, but the Government Accountability Office, the federal oversight agency, sticks to the facts.
How the heck does owning a legal stock raise questions about someone's trustworthiness?
A creeping incompetence in handling the government seems to be overtaking Congress. Case in point? What's going on with the MSPB.
The "women inventor rate" is rising but it's still mysteriously low, a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office study found.
Innovation of federal IT springs up all over the government, including the IRS' most recent move to provide more wireless options.
Pentagon decides to go ahead with another conflict of interest study. That can't be good.
The National Academies' annual awards underscore women's contributions to research science, including three female feds.
The military press obtained what the Navy wanted to remain hidden. But should the big report, put together by a rear admiral, have been kept secret?
Government has the job of being an honest broker of information, if agencies can stay open to issue it.
The most important thing is usable information that's easy to find. Some agencies fall short.
Tom Temin outlines why recent cloud strategies released by the Defense Department read more like a way of backing into what the department has already been doing in cloud computing.
Our survey reveals a sense of resentment of the furloughed by those forced to work.