Implementation plan for voting system requirements set
The Election Assistance Commission is revising current voting system guidelines used by states to buy time for a more complete rewrite that will address thorny technical issues.
Argonne uses RFID to monitor nuclear shipments
Not content with tracking the location and contents of drums that contain nuclear materials, researchers at the Argonne National Laboratory have developed a radio frequency identification tag that can also monitor and report environmental conditions.
A switch to security
The Avocent SwitchView SC540 is a secure keyboard-video-mouse switch that locks out rogue USB devices but will work with Common Access Card readers.
PowerPoint security bug found in Office 2003
The software giant has issued a security advisory about the potential exploit, which affects older Microsoft Office versions up through Office 2003. The current flagship Office 2007 product is not vulnerable.
How NIST put DNSsec into play
NIST’s experience shows it's possible, though not simple. And for agencies, it's also inevitable.
Walk, don't run, to DNSsec deployment
The best way to approach DNSsec deployment is one step at a time, experienced administrators say.
Taxpayers embrace e-filing, but much remains unknown about how the new technology affects IRS
The adoption of electronic tax filing is outpacing IRS programs to oversee and take full advantage of this new software industry, according to GAO.
CISO Perspectives | Authorization as the new approach to C&A
Members of the (ISC)2 U.S. Government Advisory Board Executive Writers Bureau explain the effort to create a common information security framework that emphasizes continuous monitoring.
Loose grip on government data
An ITRC report says government agencies have experienced more data breaches than any other sector so far this year.
L-1 ships new access control device
The TWIC-Station is a new access control device capable of reading a wide range of secure government credentials based on Federal Information Processing Standard 201.
Senate legislation would impose cybersecurity standards, certifications
Legislation in the Senate would consolidate the leadership of federal cybersecurity programs in a new advisory office in the Executive Office of the President.
NIST releases suite of e-voting system tests for comment
The National Institute of Standards and Technology has released a draft suite of tests to verify compliance with the Election Assistance Commission's new set of voluntary guidelines for voting systems.
Cisco's Stewart: IT security has become top-of-mind issue
Cybersecurity efforts have the potential to spur the economy and help the country tackle other pressing issues, Cisco's chief security officer said.
Report: Government should adopt industry best practices in securing software
The tools and techniques exist to ensure that software is developed securely, but leadership in establishing a governmentwide priority has been lacking, observers say.
No serious threat from Conficker on April 1
The updated variant will likely improve its defenses, but the odds of a major cyber attack from the worm do not appear to be great.
Government seizes opportunity to build security into new critical infrastructure
Development of security standards will go hand in hand with development of technology for the new Smart Grid.
Cybersecurity challenge down to an elite eight
Eight college teams will compete head-to-head at the University of Texas at San Antonio, defending networks against red team attackers in the fourth annual National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition.
2009 FOSE slide show
From front-office tools to back-office storage and security, the FOSE exposition floor had something to offer for every government IT professional.
Tripwire takes trip toward FIPS 140-2 certification
Tripwire Enterprise is in the process to achieve certification for the Federal Information Processing Standard for cryptographic models, FIPS 140-2, by the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Dan Mintz | A recovering CIO’s view of the new security initiatives
The 20 controls in the Consensus Audit Guidelines (CAG) are not a replacement for the NIST guidelines, but I believe that using the CAG as an initial set of controls is a good thing.
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