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Government Technology/News
FedRAMP Saw More Reused Cloud Security Packages in Fiscal 2021
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 29, 2021
FedRAMP Saw More Reused Cloud Security Packages in Fiscal 2021

The Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) saw the number of cloud security packages reused by agencies increase to 2,864 in fiscal year 2021, up from 1,971 in FY 2020. 

The program authorized 45 new cloud products into the FedRAMP Marketplace and the number of authorized cloud service offerings rose to 239 in FY 2021, up 18 percent from the previous fiscal year, according to a blog post published Nov. 9.

FedRAMP facilitated more than 600 meetings with agencies and cloud service providers and conducted seven events with industry stakeholders and seven agency trainings in FY 2021.

The redesigned FedRAMP website has recorded more than 1 million views since launch, while the program’s Youtube channel logged more than 38,000 views in FY 2021.

FedRAMP said it plans to further advance the use of automation and improve business processes in FY 2022.

Executive Moves/News
Shalanda Young Nominated as Permanent OMB Director
by William McCormick
Published on November 29, 2021
Shalanda Young Nominated as Permanent OMB Director

President Biden plans to nominate Shalanda Young, deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget, to become the permanent leader of the agency.

Young has been performing the responsibilities of OMB director on an acting basis since March when she was confirmed by the Senate as deputy director, the White House said Wednesday.

In her current role, she advises the Biden administration on the federal budget process and helps oversee the implementation of regulations and policies across the executive branch.

Young previously served as staff director of the House Appropriations Committee and a presidential management fellow at the National Institute of Health.

Biden also announced his intent to formally nominate Nani Coloretti, senior vice president at the Urban Institute, as OMB deputy director.

Coloretti has experience working for the federal government, having held senior positions at the departments of Housing and Urban Development and Treasury and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Government Technology/News
CISA, DOD Spearhead 5G Security Assessment Method Development; Vincent Sritapan Quoted
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on November 29, 2021
CISA, DOD Spearhead 5G Security Assessment Method Development; Vincent Sritapan Quoted

The departments of Homeland Security (DHS) and Defense (DOD) have drafted a five-step framework meant to help agencies determine a security baseline for 5G technology projects, Federal News Network reported Thursday.

DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) worked with DOD to create the guide for defining federal use cases of newer wireless communications equipment, identifying an assessment boundary and security requirements, aligning the conditions with federal assessment and authorization policies, and assessing any policy gap.

Vincent Sritapan, who leads new services innovation in CISA’s Cybersecurity Quality Services Management Office, said at a Palo Alto Networks-hosted event that the partnership seeks to address “the need to assess 5G technologies and incorporate it into our operational environment.”

He added that the 5G security evaluation methodology also covers mobile telecommunication protocols such as standards from the 3rd Generation Partnership Project.

General News/News
New DOD Group to Synchronize Airborne Object Identification, Management Efforts Across Government
by Angeline Leishman
Published on November 24, 2021
New DOD Group to Synchronize Airborne Object Identification, Management Efforts Across Government

The Department of Defense has announced plans for a new organization that will assess unidentified aerial phenomena taking place on or near military training ranges and installations.

The Airborne Object Identification and Management Synchronization Group will harmonize U.S. efforts to detect, identity and attribute objects of interest in special use airspace that could threaten aircraft and national security, DOD said Tuesday.

AOIMSG will succeed the U.S. Navy’s Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force and operate under the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.

Representatives from the Pentagon and the U.S. Intelligence Community will form the Airborne Object Identification and Management Executive Council to lead the new group.

News/Space
NRL, NASA to Investigate Solar Energetic Particles Using New GEO Coronagraph
by Angeline Leishman
Published on November 24, 2021
NRL, NASA to Investigate Solar Energetic Particles Using New GEO Coronagraph

The Naval Research Laboratory and NASA are preparing a joint experiment that will study solar energetic particles posing harm to U.S. Navy satellites and future manned space exploration missions.

The Ultraviolet Spectro-Coronagraph Pathfinder will carry a novel solar telescope to collect signals at the Sun’s corona region where SEPs originate from a near geosynchronous-Earth orbit , NRL said Tuesday.

UVSC Pathfinder will help researchers understand how the Sun generate SEPs and improve space weather forecasting to protect U.S. assets in space.

“These powerful particles can wreak havoc with spacecraft and expose astronauts to dangerous radiation,” explained Leonard Strachan, Jr., the mission’s principal investigator at NRL.

The official added that the instrument will validate the capability a new coronagraph design with five apertures that carry their own occulter to collect improved signals from the Sun.

“If we can prove it works, then we can think about how to miniaturize the instrument and possibly deploy them to multiple locations in the Solar System,” shared Strachan.

USVC Pathfinder will launch on Dec. 4 as part of the Department of Defense’s Space Test Program-3 onboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V 551 rocket from Florida.

Government Technology/News
NIST Seeks Input on Marketplace Trends, Investment Needs of 8 Emerging Tech Areas
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 24, 2021
NIST Seeks Input on Marketplace Trends, Investment Needs of 8 Emerging Tech Areas

The National Institute of Standards and Technology has issued a request for information on marketplace trends, policy, legislative, investment needs and supply chain risks of eight emerging technology areas.

NIST is seeking insights to come up with a forward-thinking approach that promotes economic competitiveness and growth by supporting these emerging tech areas: artificial intelligence; internet of things; IoT in manufacturing; quantum computing; blockchain technology; new and advanced materials; unmanned delivery services; and 3D printing, according to a Federal Register notice published Monday.

The agency will use the collected information in a final congressional report.

NIST wants interested stakeholders to share their insights on how the federal government could help broaden economic opportunities within the emerging tech areas and how existing regulations may help or hamper the maturation of those tech areas.

Responses to the RFI are due Jan. 31.

Cybersecurity/News
David Pekoske: TSA Updates Deadlines in Forthcoming Cyber Directive for Railroad Operators
by Naomi Cooper
Published on November 24, 2021
David Pekoske: TSA Updates Deadlines in Forthcoming Cyber Directive for Railroad Operators

Transportation Security Administration Administrator David Pekoske said the agency has extended the deadlines outlined in its forthcoming security directive for railroad operators following consultation with the industry.

TSA pushed the deadline for railroad operators to report any potential and confirmed cyber incidents from 12 to 24 hours and the deadline to develop a cybersecurity contingency plan from 60 days to six months, Federal News Network reported Tuesday.

The security directive scheduled to be released by the end of the year will require critical transport and railroad companies to designate a cybersecurity coordinator, submit cyber incident reports to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, conduct a cyber vulnerability assessment and prepare an incident response plan.

“We’re looking at the entities that transport the largest number of passengers and the largest volume of cargo through the nation’s most populated metropolitan areas,” Pekoske said.

He added that TSA will issue an information circular providing similar recommendations for the remaining rail, public transportation and bus operators.

Earlier in May, TSA instructed pipeline systems operators to owners and operators of U.S. pipeline systems to submit cyber incident reports to CISA following the ransomware attack against Colonial Pipeline.

Unlike the pipeline security directives, the rail transit and railroad directives will be available to the public, according to Pekoske. 

Cybersecurity/News
GAO: CISA Must Reexamine Effectiveness of Efforts for Communications Sector
by Nichols Martin
Published on November 24, 2021
GAO: CISA Must Reexamine Effectiveness of Efforts for Communications Sector

The Government Accountability Office advises the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency to assess how effective the latter’s efforts are to the communications sector.

CISA is tasked to coordinate with federal agencies for incident response efforts but has not assessed how well it supports the sector that operates broadcast systems and networks critical to national security, GAO said Tuesday.

The government watchdog said CISA could better identify priorities if the security agency assesses program effectiveness with regard to the communications sector.

GAO assessed the following factors to make its conclusion: the issues identified by CISA as threatening to the sector, CISA’s efforts to support the sector and how much the security agency assessed its support for the sector.

The accountability office also recommends CISA revise the latter’s plan specific to the communications sector.

The Department of Homeland Security agreed with GAO’s recommendations on the matter.

News/Space
NASA Launches DART Kinetic Impact Mission With SpaceX; Bill Nelson Quoted
by reynolitoresoor
Published on November 24, 2021
NASA Launches DART Kinetic Impact Mission With SpaceX; Bill Nelson Quoted

NASA launched its Double Asteroid Redirection Test on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Wednesday to test technology for defending Earth against potential asteroid or comet hazards.

DART, an autonomous spacecraft built and managed by Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, will intentionally collide with a non-threatening known asteroid, Dimorphos, with the goal of slightly changing its motion and trajectory, NASA said.

Bill Nelson, NASA administrator, said, “In addition to all the ways NASA studies our universe and our home planet, we’re also working to protect that home, and this test will help prove out one viable way to protect our planet from a hazardous asteroid should one ever be discovered that is headed toward Earth.”

The collision will occur between September and October 2022 and is expected to shorten Dimorphos’ orbit around Didymos by several minutes. The collision will also test the effectiveness of kinetic impact as a reliable method for future asteroid deflection.

DART is equipped with a Didymos Reconnaissance and Asteroid Camera for Optical navigation (DRACO), which will turn on in one week to provide images from the Falcon 9 rocket, as well as a Small-body Maneuvering Autonomous Real Time Navigation (SMART Nav) for identifying the asteroids.

Additionally, the Italian Space Agency’s LICIACube is aboard the rocket and will be released prior to the collision to capture images of the impact and its immediate effects. 

The European Space Agency’s Hera project is slated to conduct a survey of the asteroids approximately four years after the impact.

The launch occurred ahead of schedule, as it was previously planned for Nov. 27.

News/Space
New Congressional Funding to Continue Development of New Mexico Observatory
by Angeline Leishman
Published on November 24, 2021
New Congressional Funding to Continue Development of New Mexico Observatory

Congress has committed $6.2 million to advance the development of a new optical telescope complex for characterizing space objects at geosynchronous Earth orbit and beyond in Socorro, New Mexico.

The money enables New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology to complete the first phase of the $30 million Magdalen Ridge Observatory Interferometer project, Air Force Research Laboratory, the funding contract manager, said Monday.

Once completed in 2026, MROI will feature three telescopes and two scientific instruments that promise more efficient imaging and higher resolution photos than existing arrays.

“If successful, this effort will enable us to leverage new, innovative sensing instruments that, while directly advancing astronomical sciences, could also augment space domain awareness and defense,” explained Brian Engberg, head of AFRL’s space control branch.

Van Romero, vice president for research and professor of physics at NMT, noted that the observatory will enable the assessment of orbiting man-made objects and the study of various phenomena in deep space.

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