Federal Homeland Security

Water Utilities First To Measure Security Progress Under Plan

Sep 12, 2008

The water sector is set to become the first of the country’s 18 critical infrastructure and key resource sectors to develop a metric and launch a tool to gauge security progress under the National Infrastructure Protection Plan framework....

New DHS Counterintelligence Unit Fights Foreign Threats

Sep 3, 2008

Concerns about foreign spies and terrorists have prompted the Homeland Security Department (DHS) to set up its own counterintelligence division and require strict reporting from employees about foreign travel, according to a memo obtained by The Associated Press....

New Approach

By Stephanie Silk

The security and stability of a high-risk facility relies as much on the attentiveness and leadership of its security officers as it does on technology....

Cyber Terror

By Michael Fickes

Two months before Russian tanks rolled into South Ossetia in Georgia, denial of service attacks began shutting down Web sites used by the Georgian government...

Technical School Grads Targeted For National Border Security Jobs

May 15, 2008

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) recently sent letters to more than 100 technical schools around the country, encouraging graduating students to consider pursuing a federal career in a host of available jobs....

Technology At The Ports

Larry Anderson Stephanie Silk Michael Fickes Rafi Bhonker

The Port of Los Angeles, located in San Pedro Bay, is Southern California's 7,500-acre gateway to international commerce. Throughout 43 miles of waterfront...

An Automation ANSWER

By Vik Ghai

The MiFARE Classic card used in physical access control systems (PACS), contactless payments, public transportation, etc. was recently hacked. Government...

Iris Readers Speed Travelers Through Security

May 1, 2008

Verified Identity Pass Inc., New York, the operator of the Clear (flyclear.com) airport security fast-pass system, is deploying biometric iris readers...

An Institutional Focus

Mar 1, 2008

Centers of Excellence, designated by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), are designed to support, stimulate and sustain the nation's intellectual...

All Points Secure

BY ASHLEY ROE

Fort Stewart and the nearby Hunter Army Airfield (HAAF), both located near Savannah, Ga., serve as leading U.S. Army mobilization stations for Operation...

Report Finds Inconclusive Answers To Radiation Detector Test

Mar 1, 2008

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) tests of new radiation detection machines last year did not show whether the costly devices performed well enough...

The Power of Fusion

By Michael Fickes

More than a year before 9/11, intelligence collected by the National Security Agency (NSA) could have identified one of the hijackers, but NSA didn't...

Threat Condition ORANGE

By Roger L. Kemp

In order to improve coordination and communication among all levels of government and the public in the fight against terrorism, the President signed...

Walk, Screen and Detect

By Stephanie Silk

In October 2007, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) announced that it would award $52.3 million in contracts to deploy security technology...

Deadline Looms

Jan 1, 2008

The final rule for REAL ID compliance provides the necessary guidance for states to begin building systems and linking networks to fulfill the mandates...

Triggering A Cyber War

By Kevin G. Coleman

Much attention is being given to the threat of a cyber war. Opinions about how close or how far away we are from such an event differ greatly among the...

PROTECTING CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE: A Shared Responsibility

Dec 1, 2007

One of the key issues confronting the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the Department of Defense (DoD), state, local and tribal governments and...

Alabama Gets Virtual

Dec 1, 2007

Alabama Gov. Bob Riley and the Alabama Department of Homeland Security have unveiled the Virtual Alabama software program, a limited-access Web site that...

A Canopy of Connectivity

By Ashley Roe

At the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), one of the U.S. Department of Energy's (DoE) 10 national laboratories, 4,200 staff members conduct...

Secret Service Agents Go Online To Fight Electronic Crime

By Jacqueline Emich

Among most of us, the U.S. Secret Service is closely associated with the physical protection of the President and other top government officials. Beyond...

MARITIME SECURITY: Protecting Naval Vessels

Oct 1, 2007

The U.S. Navy protects its ships using what looks like a series of tennis nets sitting on cylindrical-shaped floats that fasten together to form a floating...

Video In Flight

Aug 1, 2007

Today's more sophisticated security video surveillance systems must be reliable, and more complex video systems can be susceptible to signal and dependability...

Study Shows Fed Workers In Dark About Security

May 31, 2007

SecureInfo, McLean, Va., a security firm that specializes in federal government services, has published a study (available on request for download here.) showing that although more than 90 percent of agency workers have completed a security awareness training course in the last 12 months, some 65 percent of them say they have never heard of FISMA, the federal IT security standard.
The Federal Information Security Management Act defines the U.S. government's requirements for information security, both in IT and among workers and contractors, according to Forbes.
Under FISMA, agency employees are required to complete a "security awareness" course every year, and both the SecureInfo study and the FISMA report to Congress indicate that more than 90 percent of workers have completed that course....

Security Firms At Higher Risk For Attack In Iraq

May 31, 2007

Private security contractors became notorious for making money from the invasion of Iraq. But without them, the number of coalition troops in the country would have been significantly higher. And since the peak of the market in 2004, they have faced greater dangers than ever and reduced financial returns, according to the Financial Times.
"It's certainly more dangerous. The number and the sophistication of attacks have risen, as has the level of information the terrorists have regarding our activities," says Jonathan Garratt, managing director of Erinys, London, which has about 1,000 security personnel in Iraq mainly on U.S. government contracts....

Homeland Security Looks To Sci-fi Authors

May 31, 2007

Looking to prevent the next terrorist attack, the Homeland Security Department is tapping into the wild imaginations of a group of self-described "deviant" thinkers: science-fiction writers.
"We spend our entire careers living in the future," says author Arlan Andrews, one of a handful of writers the government brought to Washington to attend a Homeland Security conference on science and technology, according to USA Today.
Those responsible for keeping the nation safe from devastating attacks realize that in addition to border agents, police and airport screeners, they "need people to think of crazy ideas," Andrews says....

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