GovLoop

The Evolving Cyber Threat – Plus the 7 Gov Stories

On GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

You can find all of our programs online: DorobekINSIDER.com and GovLoop Insights at http://insights.govloop.com.

But up front: The evolving cyber-threat

Cyber-security is evolving. And changing. And yet the data show that the bad guys evolve faster than the good guys do. That is one of the conclusions coming from Verizon’s latest annual Data Breach Investigations Report. This assessment coming from The Washington Post:

Hackers are getting better at offense: Companies aren’t getting better at defense: High-profile data breaches at retailers such as Target, Neiman Marcus and Michaels brought the sorry state of corporate cybersecurity into sharp focus last year as millions of customers found the data they had entrusted to companies had fallen into the hands of cybercriminals. But are you ready for the bad news? It is likely to get worse in 2014. That’s the takeaway from a report from Verizon to be released Wednesday, which found that hackers are becoming more efficient and organized while many companies are struggling to get even fundamental cybersecurity measures into place. The number of data breaches is growing quickly, but corporations aren’t managing to keep up with the pace or scope of breaches, according to Verizon’s latest annual Data Breach Investigations Report.

If you don’t think that this matters to government, the Verizon assessment looked at more than 60,000 hacks and attacks. Of those, 47,000 of them were on public sector organizations. [And as a programming note, we will talk to one of the authors of that report Tuesday on GovLoop’s DorobekINSIDER.]

GovLoop just published its latest guide looking at cyber-security: Innovations That Matter: Your Road Map to a Secure Future [New Cybersecurity Report]… and I will be the host of a GovLoop event on Wednesday looking at cyber-security.

And I am pondering guests for GovLoop’s DorobekINSIDER LIVE — a live discussion on May 21 that will focus on cyber-security. Thoughts about how we can help you do your job better?

The seven stories that impact your life:

  1. NextGov: Coming Soon: Pentagon’s Multi-Billion Dollar Health Records Contract – “Sometime in the coming months, the Defense Department will bid out its Healthcare Management Systems Modernization contract, an effort so large in monetary size and game-changing scope that it could significantly influence the future of health care in the United States.”

  2. GovExec: The Federal Government is Giving Fewer People Security Clearances – “The number of new security clearances provided by the federal government — both initial clearances and renewals — has decreased by 9 percent since 2011, according to a new report.”

  3. USDOJ: Justice Department Announces Joseph F. Klimavicz as New Chief Information Officer – “Klimavicz will replace Luke McCormack, who left the department in November 2013. Kevin Deeley, deputy CIO, has served as acting CIO since McCormack’s departure. Deeley will continue to serve as deputy CIO.”

  4. National Journal: Why the U.S. Government is Extra Worried About the Huge Internet Explorer Bug – “Over the weekend, Microsoft announced a huge security flaw in its Internet Explorer Web browser (in versions IE6 through IE11). ‘An attacker who successfully exploited this vulnerability could gain the same user rights as the current user,’ Microsoft wrote in its advisory. In response, the Homeland Security Department issued its own memo, advising computer users within the federal government to ‘consider employing an alternative Web browser,’ seeing that the vulnerability ‘could lead to the complete compromise of an affected system,’ which is not desirable.”

  5. GovExec: How Exactly Will Agencies Erase Bias Against Unemployed Job Applicants? – “The federal government’s human resources agency told chief human capital officers across government they must submit reports by the end of April on what processes — intentionally or inadvertently — put unemployed applicants for a federal job at an ‘undue disadvantage.’”

  6. NextGov: GSA Wants Contractors to Sign on the Digital Line – “The General Services Administration is looking for an agencywide service that can obviate the need for pen-and-ink signatures and move the contracting process entirely online, according to documents posted on Monday.”

  7. Federal Computer Week: Brubaker Leaving DOD – “Paul Brubaker, the Defense Department’s director of planning and performance management in the Office of the Deputy Chief Management Officer, is returning to the private sector.”

DorobekINSIDER water-cooler fodder… yes, we’re trying to help you make your water-cooler time better too…

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