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News
Department of the Navy Issues 2019-2021 Business Operations Strategy
by Peter Graham
Published on October 25, 2018
Department of the Navy Issues 2019-2021 Business Operations Strategy


Department of the Navy Issues 2019-2021 Business Operations StrategyThe Department of the Navy has released its latest business operation strategy to serve as a guideline for the implementation of its business reform agenda. 

The business operations plan for fiscal years 2019-2021 will develop a long-term mission that seeks to make a shift in function from oversight to leadership and take the lead role in recruiting, training and equipping U.S. Navy and Marine Corps personnel, the department said Wednesday.

The plan aims to adhere to the tenets of the National Defense Strategy which include creating a more lethal force; boosting relationships with alliances and fostering new ones with other partners; and reorganizing the department’s business practices.

It also ascribes to the objectives outlined in the Fiscal Year 2018-2022 National Defense Business Operations Plan, which include renewing military readiness; investing in recapitalization, innovation and modernization strategies; boosting information technology and cybersecurity technologies; selecting appropriate counterintelligence, intelligence and security support contractors for Defense Department operations; beefing up recruitment strategies; streamlining administrative and regulatory processes; and conducting regular performance audits.

 

News
Cyber Op Under Way to Deter Russian Interference in Elections
by Jerry Petersen
Published on October 25, 2018
Cyber Op Under Way to Deter Russian Interference in Elections


Cyber Op Under Way to Deter Russian Interference in ElectionsU.S. defense officials have said that a cyber operation aimed at deterring Russian interference in American elections is underway, the New York Times reported Tuesday.

Defense officials knowledgeable about the campaign have said that U.S. Cyber Command is going after individual Russian operatives, notifying them that they have been identified and are being monitored.

The officials, however, have refrained from revealing how many operatives are being targeted or how they are being contacted.

The cyber operation is only one of multiple initiatives being undertaken to safeguard U.S. elections from Russian influence.

USCYBERCOM has also sent teams to Europe to help allies defend their networks from Russian hacking.

Meanwhile, social networking services are in the process of removing fake users and accounts that spread misinformation.

News
DISA’s Brian Hermann: DoD Should Change Policies for Commercial Products Ahead of DEOS Contract
by Monica Jackson
Published on October 25, 2018
DISA’s Brian Hermann: DoD Should Change Policies for Commercial Products Ahead of DEOS Contract


DISA’s Brian Hermann: DoD Should Change Policies for Commercial Products Ahead of DEOS ContractBrian Hermann, chief of the Defense Information Systems Agency’s enterprise-wide service development division, has said the Defense Department needs to reform its processes to leverage commercial off-the-shelf products and services, Federal News Network reported Wednesday.

Hermann noted during a FedInsider-hosted event that changing DoD’s procurement process for commercial products is critical for the Defense Enterprise Operations Solutions contract, which remains in limbo because of a pending final request for proposal for a universal communications platform.

“DEOS has to remain non-developmental, and focused on actual existing commercial offerings,” he explained.

The DISA official recommended DoD to relax its requirements, expand its networks for new capabilities and assess privately-made systems for cyber resilience and their capability to adapt to defense networks.

Under the DEOS contract, DISA intends consolidate all communication tools in an single system to help different government agencies work with each other and save costs.

The contract will be awarded to a single vendor to enable interoperability between government departments.

News
GAO: VA Should Address Contracting Officers’ Training Needs in Veterans First Program Implementation
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 25, 2018
GAO: VA Should Address Contracting Officers’ Training Needs in Veterans First Program Implementation


GAO: VA Should Address Contracting Officers’ Training Needs in Veterans First Program ImplementationThe Government Accountability Office has called on the Department of Veterans Affairs to provide contracting officers with more training in implementing a program that aims to support veteran-owned small businesses through contract opportunities.

GAO said in a report published Wednesday that it interviewed 30 contracting officers and found that 12 of them encountered difficulty in making “fair and reasonable price” assessments of contract awards under the Veterans First program.

That is one of the two criteria, dubbed the VA Rule of Two, set by the Supreme Court in its 2016 decision.

The report showed that contracts set aside for veteran-owned small businesses rose from 20.8 percent in fiscal 2016 to 25.8 percent in fiscal 2017 following the Supreme Court decision.

GAO recommended that VA improve the way it oversees the compliance of such businesses with subcontracting limitations, such as ensuring the inclusion of the required clauses in contracts.
 

News
Patrick Shanahan: ‘Space Force’ Needed to Ensure US Supremacy in Space
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 25, 2018
Patrick Shanahan: ‘Space Force’ Needed to Ensure US Supremacy in Space


Patrick Shanahan: ‘Space Force’ Needed to Ensure US Supremacy in SpaceDeputy Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan has said the creation of a “space force” as the sixth service branch is “absolutely necessary” to ensure the country’s superiority in space, Defense.gov reported Wednesday.

“The U.S. military is the best in the world in space, but our adversaries have taken note and are actively developing and fielding capabilities to potentially deny our usage of space in crisis or war,” he said Tuesday during the National Space Council’s fourth meeting at Fort Lesley J. McNair in Washington, D.C.

He mentioned the Defense Department’s plan to submit in the coming weeks a legislative measure to establish the space force and efforts to form a space development agency.

“The effort now is on reconciling capabilities prioritized by the National Defense Strategy with the readiness of technology, anchored by our assumptions on how quickly we can scale,” Shanahan said of the new agency.

Vice President Mike Pence hosted the meeting, where he delivered a speech about the space force’s role in addressing the lack of accountability and centralized leadership over national security space programs.
 

Government Technology/News
Suzette Kent: Data Management Efforts, Investments in AI Must be Synchronized
by Monica Jackson
Published on October 25, 2018
Suzette Kent: Data Management Efforts, Investments in AI Must be Synchronized


Suzette Kent: Data Management Efforts, Investments in AI Must be SynchronizedFederal Chief Information Officer Suzette Kent has said there is a need for agencies to understand and organize their data before investing in artificial intelligence systems, NextGov reported Wednesday.

Kent said during Nvidia‘s GPU DC technology conference it is important to synchronize data management operations and other factors with plans to leverage AI technologies.

The Trump administration has set data management as one of the priorities under the President’s Management Agenda.

The government is also increasing its efforts in AI to keep pace with adversaries.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency recently introduced the AI Next program, which is a $2B initiative that intends to equip new technologies with human-like reasoning capabilities to promote human-machine teaming.

The campaign aims to automate the Defense Department‘s critical business processes, increase the reliability of AI systems and initiate the development of advanced AI algorithms, among other things.

Kent also noted the importance of an information technology-literate workforce in the federal government to the success of the data management endeavor.

Government Technology/News
NSWC Crane Signs Chemical Reaction R&D Agreement With Indiana-Based University
by Nichols Martin
Published on October 24, 2018
NSWC Crane Signs Chemical Reaction R&D Agreement With Indiana-Based University


NSWC Crane Signs Chemical Reaction R&D Agreement With Indiana-Based UniversityNaval Surface Warfare Center, Crane Division, has partnered with the University of Southern Indiana to jointly perform research on chemical reactions.

The two parties signed a cooperative research and development agreement on Monday to initiate the joint effort, Naval Sea Systems Command said Tuesday.

The new agreement allows for sharing of experts, laboratories and equipment between USI and NSWC Crane.

Jonathan Dilger, director of research at NSWC Crane, said that the agreement addresses a need for studies on chemical outputs of special munitions and pyrotechnic reactions.

“We wanted to research the potential harmful effects these chemical reactions could have on the environment and warfighters themselves,” he said.

This partnership adds to other collaborative technology efforts between USI and the Defense Department over the past decade.

News
Commerce Department to Hold Second Software Transparency Workshop in November
by Monica Jackson
Published on October 24, 2018
Commerce Department to Hold Second Software Transparency Workshop in November


Commerce Department to Hold Second Software Transparency Workshop in NovemberThe Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration will administer a workshop in November that will focus on the idea of establishing transparency for software parts, Federal News Network reported Tuesday.

The NTIA Software Component Transparency meeting on Nov. 6 in New York will be the continuation of the first workshop of its kind, which kicked off on July 19.

The effort comes as the government grows suspicious of software and hardware programs developed overseas that foreign countries may use to spy on the U.S.

“It’s very difficult when you start going to the lower tiers in the supply chain and you have embedded components and embedded software because there isn’t a bill of materials for the products you buy,” said Donald Davidson, deputy director of cybersecurity risk management at the Office of the Defense Department Chief Information Officer.

He explained during an Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association-hosted event that there is a need for the government to consider requiring a bill of materials for procured software systems and analyze how that effort would affect operations and costs.

NTIA has yet to define a date for a potential third software transparency workshop.

The U.S. Army supports the idea of developing a standard for informing the DoD about threats to the supply chain.

Maj. Johanna Wynne, intelligence planner at Army Futures Command, noted that the U.S. lacks a common set of practices to communicate the data that it needs.

“The risk assessments that we do receive are often late; they do not provide adequate visualization of trends or patterns and situational awareness. Nor do they support appropriate DoD responses,” Wynne added.

News
DHS S&T Wants Answers to 4 Questions Before Implementing New Cybersecurity Strategy
by Peter Graham
Published on October 24, 2018
DHS S&T Wants Answers to 4 Questions Before Implementing New Cybersecurity Strategy


DHS S&T Wants Answers to 4 Questions Before Implementing New Cybersecurity StrategyThe Department of Homeland Security‘s Science and Technology Directorate is initiating new research to answer key questions before it embarks on a new cybersecurity strategy.

To that end, the department’s S&T Cyber Risk Economics program, or CYRIE, aims to fund applied research and development, interdisciplinary initiatives and knowledge technologies and capabilities, the DHS said Tuesday.

CYRIE seeks to answer how and why cybersecurity investments are made; how these investments affect risk and harm; the relationship between cybersecurity and traditional business risk; and necessary incentives needed to support effective cyber risk management.

In line with this, the S&T developed the new Cyber Risk Economics Capability Gaps Research Strategy, which is grouped in six themes and subdivided into 12 focus areas and seeks to address risk challenges such as risk quantification; government, law and insurance roles; third party risk; organizational behavior and incentives; data gathering and distribution; and threat dynamics.

“The strategy’s objective is to narrow the gap between research and practice by apprising the research community of real-world cyber risk economic challenges, and ultimately, to inform evidence-based policy and actions by industry and government,” said CYRIE program manager Erin Kenneally.

“CYRIE’s goal is to improve value-based decision making by those who own, operate, protect and regulate the nation’s vital data assets and critical infrastructure,” Kenneally added.

 

News
DOE Allots $53M Solar Technology R&D Projects; Rick Perry Quoted
by Nichols Martin
Published on October 24, 2018
DOE Allots $53M Solar Technology R&D Projects; Rick Perry Quoted


DOE Allots $53M Solar Technology R&D Projects; Rick Perry QuotedThe Department of Energy is investing $53M to fund 53 early-stage solar technology projects with the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Solar Energy Technologies Office.

Selected participants will work within the areas of photovoltaics and concentrating solar-thermal power (CSP), aiming to develop technologies that support a growing workforce for renewable energy, the DOE said Tuesday.

Photovoltaics directly transform sunlight into electric power, while the CSP approach gathers sunlight-based heat that produces electricity like standard power plants.

“Developing new skills through workforce training is critical to expanding job opportunities in the renewable sector, which is why we are following through on our program to reach out to military veterans with new projects that will target this committed workforce,” said Rick Perry, the secretary of energy.

The projects will be grouped into three research areas: photovoltaics R&D; concentrating solar power R&D; and improving and expanding the solar industry through workforce initiatives.

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