Cybersecurity
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Lawmakers in the Magnolia State are considering bills to make the state CIO a cabinet member, mirroring a national trend of CIOs evolving from tech managers to enterprise leaders — and to create a cybersecurity department.
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School and college administrators are among hundreds of attendees at this week's TEEX Cyber Readiness Summit, exploring a wide range of topics from AI and security to identity theft and human firewalls.
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As artificial intelligence continues to evolve, how can public-sector teams prepare organizationally for the next generation of cyber attacks and equip themselves with the right tools?
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Despite a recent move to double IT security personnel, the University of Maryland falls prey to a "sophisticated" cyberattack.
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Among Bitcoin's challenges are hackers, volatility and regulations.
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Grant funds to rural providers for electronic health records are now exhausted and without further support from state government, the movement toward full exchange implementation will be stalled.
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The Oregon State Police and FBI are investigating what appears to be an attack by a foreign entity.
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The software company will offer multi-factor security service to most Microsoft Office 365 customers.
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The Target data breach taught the public sector a lesson about data security and demonstrated a need for change.
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NIST Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure Protection gets thumbs up from NASCIO.
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Advanced secret spy organization called "The Mask" has used a sophisticated form of malware to infiltrate governments and universities, among others, for the last seven years.
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The Microsoft co-founder also discussed the NSA, his investment in the nuclear company TerraPower, and cloud computing during his Reddit "Ask Me Anything."
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Medical-related identity theft accounted for 43 percent of all identity thefts reported in the United States in 2013.
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Virus hit computers and servers used by the Water Bureau's billing staff and the Revenue Bureau, which use the Cayenta billing system.
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Cards of some deceased employees are still active, and department heads don't know who has access to their areas.
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Reports were allowed under a legal settlement reached after several companies sued the government.
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Notre Dame paper suggests federal researchers at NIST produced a flawed study, raising the possibility that changes to iris security protocols are needed.
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NTIA will develop a voluntary code of conduct that specifies how the Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights applies to facial recognition technology.
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Security program "radioactive" after spying revelations.
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A hard drive went missing from the UW-Madison School of Pharmacy, which had it as part of a benefits program evaluation.
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The Super Bowl at MetLife stadium in New Jersey this Sunday presents a huge challenge that is being taken on by 100 different law enforcement agencies.
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