Cybersecurity
-
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.
-
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?
-
John Cook, outgoing president of Springfield Technical Community College, said rising enrollment numbers are making the college's Security Operations Center more sustainable.
More Stories
-
Electronic infrastructure needs to be protected, according to the co-chairman of the federal Internet Caucus.
-
The United Kingdom, United States and Australia are talking about national ID cards.
-
An anti-terrorism bill is gathering support, but privacy advocates fear abuse of expanded surveillance powers.
-
In June, the cracker group World of Hell hit five state government Web sites and one city government site. Government Technology asked them why, and found out its not about the information.
-
-
Videoconferencing is expanding its foothold behind prison doors as successful programs prove its public safety value.
-
Federal, state and local agencies will have their hands full during the 2002 Winter Olympics, but an Internet-based information system will allow them to respond to emergency situations as if they were part of one team.
-
City libraries will lose less than 1 percent of the citys public library budget.
-
Privacy advocates say new laws are necessary, in addition to increased enforcement of old laws.
-
Companies want assurance their proprietary information will not be made public.
-
Davis says he doesnt want to add to businesses regulatory burdens.
-
The presidents new advisor has served a Democratic and a Republican administration and is endorsed by the ITAA.
-
Civil liberties advocates won't be happy with any version of the legislation.
-
Plan would rely on industry self-regulation and federal preemption of state privacy laws.
-
The number of attacks on software vulnerabilities rose dramatically during 2001.
-
The group issued a warning of future attacks against other government and military sites.
-
A new critical infrastructure protection board will shoulder a host of responsibilities relating to protecting information systems.
-
A conference committee will meet to marry the House and Senate bills to present to President Bush.