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The Cyber Implications of Acquisition Speed: Part IV
Open architectures can accelerate acquisition.
Continued Innovation During DoD’s Zero-Trust Architecture Implementation
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The Future of the Army Is More About People Than Technology
TechNet Augusta speakers address the challenges facing the U.S. Army in coming years.
Navy Veers Away From Linear Modernization
Replacing older assets must be teamed with a host of new capabilities and doctrines.
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NIST Pilot Projects Seek to Improve Cybersecurity, Reduce Online Tax Fraud and Identity Theft
NIST awarded nearly $3.7 million for three pilot projects that seek to fortify online financial transactions and enhance privacy protections for health care, government services, transportation and the Internet of Things. The studies address specific cyber-based missions such as reducing tax refund theft, among others.
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Army Extends Registration Deadline for Technical Exchange
The event will inform industry about research and development efforts.
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Without Zero Trust, Data Is Nothing
Multiple participants in development aim to keep ahead of adversaries.
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CompTIA's CSA+ Mini-Boot Camp at DCOS
CompTIA is offering a bonus to Cybersecurity Analyst (CSA+) mini-boot camp participants at AFCEA's Defensive Cyber Operations Symposium.
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NATO Shapes its Enterprise For Conflicts of Tomorrow
The alliance embarks on its own JIE-type effort to secure networks and build interoperability.
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INTELLIGENCE IN THE OPEN -- A CONTINUING ISSUE
Until very recently, intelligence was a small, deeply secret aspect of public affairs. Terms like black chamber and secret service described functions that demanded to be performed but with little or no public notice. The name of the head of Britain's MI-6 was, as a remarkable reminder of this era, secret until very recent times. In the United States, the existence of the National Reconnaissance Office was classified until the 1990s, and we all know that the National Security Agency was often described, in jest but perhaps not fully in jest, as "No Such Agency."