Technically News scans thousands of industry articles to present you with a weekly source of IT news, information, and ideas that impact the public sector.
Five Critical Cyber Questions for the Next DHS Chief
A big focus under soon-to-be former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano was cybersecurity. With leaks and hacks occurring quite regularly, Ms. Napolitano’s successor will have a lot of decisions to make. NextGov has put together a list of five questions they think the next candidate for Secretary should consider. Read them here.
Why a Hacker Conference’s Fed Ban is Bad News for U.S. Cybersecurity
The recent National Security Agency cyber revelations have not only hurt foreign and domestic relationships, it apparently has hurt the government’s relationship with the hacker community. The world renowned DEF CON hacker conference issued a statement last week declaring that federal employees are not welcome at this year’s event. ThinkProgress has written why that’s bad news for government cybersecurity.
What Economists Can Teach Us About Cloud Computing
Economists have long helped people understand the world in which they live in. But how do economists from the Victorian-era and 1930s help us understand the growing adoption of cloud computing? CIO has a very interesting piece telling you how. Can we claim the term Cloudonomics?
Man Behind the Cybersecurity Framework
Last week, we mentioned that the National Institute of Standards and Technology released a new framework. GovInfoSecurity has an interview on their site with the man behind it. His name is Adam Sedgewick, and if he succeeds in gaining support from the private sector and adoption by agencies, his work will help define government cybersecurity this decade and beyond.
AWS Cloud Security Compliance Beats On-Premises
A supporter of private data centers, on-premise and so-mocked “data center Luddite” has been converted – at least when it comes to Amazon Web Services (AWS) security. After earning FedRAMP compliance under FISMA, AWS’ cybersecurity is on par with the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s (NIST) SP800-53 guidelines. He calls this success “security at scale,” and with no AWS price hike after reaching that milestone, Bob Plankers is left asking, “Why not?”