Digital Government

Caring for human life and happiness

The Army's Central Identification Laboratory, Hawaii, last week received Federal Computer Week's Monticello Award

People

Terrorists use new tools, old tactics

Despite increasing concern about 'cyberterrorism,' the tactics and goals of the world's terrorist organizations remain lowtech

Digital Government

Are cyberterrorists for real?

U.S. struggles to distinguish joyriding hackers from statesponsored attackers

People

The final journey home

Hightech tools shed new light on Korean, Vietnam War MIAs

Digital Government

How to tighten cybersecurity

Recommendations for how the government can better prepare for and combat cyberattacks

People

Policies hinder uniting of nations' networks

Senior Pentagon officials last week singled out rigid security policies and lack of planning as two key lessons from the war in Kosovo that pose the greatest challenge to improving interoperability among allied forces' computer systems.

People

National missile defense on track

A panel of experts finds that the technical capability to field a limited national missiledefense system is available and that the schedule should not be changed

People

Infosec poses allied communication challenge

The war in Kosovo offered examples of how lack of planning and restrictive security policies can hamper allied interoperability

People

Cyberdefense mired in Cold War

A false sense of cybersecurity has allowed costly Cold War-era Pentagon programs to siphon money from IT and security programs

People

Navy merges paperless initiatives

The Navy has taken a major step toward simplifying its electronic procurement process by combining the efforts of two major paperless contracting programs

People

Agencies act to secure the future

In the charge to protect computer systems against cyberattacks, the National Security Agency and the State Department are two prime examples of agencies that have taken a proactive approach.

People

Failure to communicate

When the Pentagon released its new strategic road map last month that outlined how it plans to prepare for the hightech battlefields of the future, it confirmed what senior officials and experts have said for years: The U.S. needs its allies and coalition partners.

People

U.S., Russia launch joint missile-warning center

Building on the success of a joint Year 2000 venture, Pentagon and Russian military officials have signed an agreement to build a hightech center near Moscow where both sides can monitor the globe for ballistic missile launches.

People

Experts: Center won't affect NMD

Experts say they view the agreement to build the earlywarning architecture as an important step to improve nuclear safety, but they downplay the impact the new center could have on the U.S. decision to field a limited national missile defense (NMD) system.

People

House aids net defense

Congress targeted the Pentagon's 'most serious vulnerabilities' with a $150 million increase in the fiscal 2001 Defense appropriations bill for information assurance and computer network security programs.

People

Intercepts

Intercepts

Digital Government

House boosts info security funding

House OK's a $150 million increase in the fiscal 2001 Defense appropriations bill for information assurance and computer network security programs

Digital Government

NSA plan may face political hurdles

The National Security Agency's plan to hand much of its IT support systems to industry may face hurdles on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers have shown reluctance to approve largescale outsourcing contracts

Digital Government

Senate shores up DOD security

Appropriations bill funds security specialists, biometrics

People

Pentagon seeing 2020

The uncertain future crept a little closer to the Defense Department last week, forcing the Joint Chiefs of Staff to recast its one and only strategic plan in a way the department believes will better prepare the military services for the future hightech battlefield.