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DoD/News
Ashton Carter: DoD to Create Chief Innovation Officer Role
by Ramona Adams
Published on October 31, 2016
Ashton Carter: DoD to Create Chief Innovation Officer Role


InnovationLightBulbThe Defense Department plans to appoint a chief innovation officer to serve as a senior adviser to the secretary and lead programs such as the Defense Innovation Board’s suggested activities, DoD News reported Friday.

Cheryl Pellerin writes Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told a Center for Strategic and International Studies event that he will implement three practices from DIB’s recommendations in efforts to drive innovation at DoD.

Carter said the chief innovation officer could help build software and human networks to support technological development across DoD; sponsor contests and tournaments; and facilitate training and education to boost collaboration, creativity and critical thinking.

DoD also aims to launch targeted recruiting initiatives to hire computer scientists and software engineers into the military and civilian workforce, the report stated.

Carter added DoD seeks to build on its machine learning investments through challenges, prize competitions and a virtual center of excellence model that will work to encourage academic and private sector researchers to help the Pentagon achieve “stretch goals,” DoD News said.

DoD/News
Navy Leaders Seek More Unmanned Underwater Vehicles
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 31, 2016
Navy Leaders Seek More Unmanned Underwater Vehicles


Virginia-class-submarineU.S. Navy Rear Adm. William Merz, head of the Defense Department‘s submarine warfare office, and other branch officials are looking to add more unmanned vehicles into the country’s undersea force, Navy Times reported Thursday.

David Larter writes autonomous drone developers have faced challenges in the collection of data from unmanned underwater vehicle sensors such as commercial fishing nets.

“I hope unmanned systems get there eventually but until then, give me what you have and I can plug holes that can unburden the [attack submarine fleet],” said Merz.

Vice Adm. Michael Connor, former head of the U.S. submarine forces, told Congress that UUVs can help guard select areas of the cable system to help free up attack boats for other tasks.

DoD/News
Lt. Gen. Jon Davis: Marines Eye F-35 Weapons & Sensors on UAS
by Ramona Adams
Published on October 31, 2016
Lt. Gen. Jon Davis: Marines Eye F-35 Weapons & Sensors on UAS


Jon Davis
Lt. Gen. Jon Davis

Lt. Gen. Jon Davis, U.S. Marine Corps deputy commandant for aviation, has said the service branch’s future Group 5 unmanned aircraft system may carry the same weapons and sensors as the F-35 fighter jet, DoD Buzz reported Thursday.

Davis told the Unmanned Systems Defense conference in Virginia that the Marine air-ground task force unmanned expeditionary platform or MUX will collaborate with the F-35B Lightning II aircraft and support manned-unmanned teaming, Hope Hodge Seck wrote.

“I think the Group 5 [unmanned aircraft system] for the Marine Corps will have [AIM-120 Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile] on there, will have AIM-9X [Sidewinder missile], will have all the weapons that an F-35 will carry, maybe even the sensors the F-35 will carry,” Davis said, according to the report.

Davis added he wants a technology demonstration flight of MUX by 2018 and early operational capability for the UAS by 2024, the report stated.

DoD/News
Cyber Training Course Goes Online for Officers & First Responders
by Dominique Stump
Published on October 31, 2016
Cyber Training Course Goes Online for Officers & First Responders


cyber-hack-network-computerThe International Association of Chiefs of Police has partnered with the FBI to provide a free online cyber training program for all local, state, tribal, territorial and federal law enforcers and first responders.

The Cyber Investigator Certification Program features nine modules on software, hardware, the internet and social networks, encryption, legal tools and digital evidence in an effort to train first responders to inspect and secure electronic evidences in a crime scene, the FBI said Oct. 19.

Participants will receive classroom-style lessons from cyber experts from the FBI, Carnegie Mellon University, prosecutors’ offices and other law enforcement agencies and will acquire a course certificate upon completion of the entire training program.

“The goal of the course… is to improve a first responder’s technical knowledge by focusing on best practices in terms of investigative methods specific for cyber investigations,” said Special Agent James McDonald from the cyber training and logistics unit within the FBI’s cyber division.

“The more first responders understand about technology, the less chance there is of errors being made while securing a crime scene involving digital evidence,” he added.

The course’s software session includes primers on metadata, operating systems and cloud, while its hardware deals with specific digital devices, electronic storage and networks.

The digital evidence module is designed to train participants to recognize potential sources of digital evidence, secure a digital device and document a crime scene, while the legal skills training offers lessons on the Electronic Communications Privacy Act and search warrants and consent searches for digital evidence.

The agency’s cyber division collaborated with the IACP and cyber experts from the Carnegie Mellon to develop and launch the CICP in October 2015 and has since garnered close to 5000 enrollments.

The FBI and the university are developing four Level 1 cyber training courses on cyber and digital cases for beginning to intermediate-level detectives, as well as three Level 2 training courses on network-based crimes, such as malware, worms and viruses for intermediate to advance detectives.

Civilian/News
HHS Updates FOIA Regulations to Address Backlog & Response Time
by Ramona Adams
Published on October 31, 2016
HHS Updates FOIA Regulations to Address Backlog & Response Time


HHS Health and Human ServicesThe Department of Health & Human Services has updated its Freedom of Information Act regulations in efforts to process more of the backlog and address response time.

Kevin Griffis, HHS assistant secretary for public affairs, wrote in a blog post published Friday the department worked to reduce backlog of FOIA requests by 77 percent from 19,351 in fiscal year 2008 to 4,519 in FY 2016.

Sixty-seven percent or 24,386 requests were processed within the 20-workday statutory timeframe, Griffis added.

HHS will also publish statistics on open and pending FOIA requests online beginning January to support transparency and accountability, the blog post stated.

Griffis noted HHS receives the fourth largest number of FOIA requests annually out of 100 executive branch agencies and in 2009, the department ranked near the bottom among federal agencies in terms of overdue request backlog and average response time.

HHS last updated its FOIA regulations in November 1988.

Civilian/News
NASA Astronaut, Russian & Japanese Counterparts Land on Earth After ISS Mission
by Ramona Adams
Published on October 31, 2016
NASA Astronaut, Russian & Japanese Counterparts Land on Earth After ISS Mission


International Space StationNASA astronaut Kate Rubins and Expedition 49 crewmates Anatoly Ivanishin and Takuya Onishi of Russia and Japan’s respective space agencies have returned to Earth after a 115-day mission aboard the International Space Station.

The astronauts landed in Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan aboard a Soyuz MS-01 spacecraft, NASA said Sunday.

Expedition 49 crew members supported hundreds of experiments in biology, biotechnology, physical science and Earth science and helped receive three cargo spacecraft with supplies and research experiments, NASA added.

The three astronauts left for ISS aboard an updated Soyuz spacecraft in July.

Rubins sequenced DNA in space in efforts to help astronauts diagnose an illness, identify microbes in the space station and determine potential health threats.

Rubins also performed two spacewalks alongside NASA’s Jeff Williams to install an international docking adapter that will work to provide a port for spacecraft carrying astronauts to ISS.

Williams and Rubins also retracted a spare thermal control radiator and installed two new cameras during their second spacewalk.

The space agency noted Rubins and Onishi have spent a total of 115 days in space during their first mission while Ivanishin has logged 280 days in space from two expeditions.

Expedition 50 crew members which include Shane Kimbrough of NASA and Sergey Ryzhikov and Andrey Borisenko of Russia’s Roscosmos space agency will operate ISS for three weeks until three new astronauts arrive, NASA said.

NASA’s Peggy Whitson, the European Space Agency’s Thomas Pesquet and Rocosmos’ Oleg Novitskiy will begin their journey to ISS on Nov. 17 from Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

DoD/News
Lt. Gen. Jon Davis: Marine Corps Deploys Blackjack UAV on Combat Mission
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 31, 2016
Lt. Gen. Jon Davis: Marine Corps Deploys Blackjack UAV on Combat Mission


BlackjackUASLt. Gen. Jon Davis, deputy commandant for aviation at the U.S. Marine Corps, said in his speech at the Defense Unmanned Systems conference that the service branch’s newest unmanned aerial vehicle has performed its first combat mission, Seapower Magazine reported Wednesday.

Otto Kreisher writes an anonymous source from the Defense Department told Seapower Magazine that the MQ-21A Blackjack combat mission occurred in the Middle East.

Davis noted that Blackjack UAVs have been deployed in two locations including the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit that sails with the USS Wasp-led amphibious ready group.

He added the drone is built to support multiple missions, unlike most of the Marine UAVs that only perform ISR operations, and that the service branch wants its future unmanned aircraft to have the capacity to operate from ships and expeditionary land bases.

The RQ-21A UAV, manufactured by Boeing‘s Insitu subsidiary, is designed to offer persistent maritime and land-based tactical reconnaissance, surveillance and target acquisition data collection and dissemination capacity to warfighters.

DoD/News
ODNI: Congress Appropriated $53B to National Intell Program for FY 2016
by Ramona Adams
Published on October 31, 2016
ODNI: Congress Appropriated $53B to National Intell Program for FY 2016

BudgetCongress appropriated $53 billion in total funds to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence‘s National Intelligence Program during fiscal year 2016.

ODNI said Friday it will not disclose any “subsidiary information” on the NIP budget in order to protect national security.

The 2016 appropriated figure is higher than the $50.4 billion the agency requested for fiscal 2016 NIP-related activities.

NIP was established to support intelligence operations by various federal departments and the Central Intelligence Agency in efforts to protect the U.S. against outside threats.

DoD/News
Brig. Gen. Robert Marion Assigned as Army Deputy for Acquisition, Systems Mgmt
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on October 31, 2016
Brig. Gen. Robert Marion Assigned as Army Deputy for Acquisition, Systems Mgmt


Robert Marion
Robert Marion

The U.S. Army has appointed Brig. Gen. Robert Marion, head of the program executive office for aviation at Redstone Arsenal in Alabama since January 2014, as the military service’s deputy for acquisition and systems management.

Army Chief of Staff Mark Milley announced Marion’s new assignment in a Defense Department release published Friday.

Marion has led the procurement of aircraft weapon systems and equipment across the Army as well as supervised more than 3,000 military, government civilian and contractor employees during his tenure as aviation program executive officer.

He started his military career as an assignment officer within the acquisition management branch of the Army Personnel Command.

After that, he was assigned to the roles of assistant project manager for UH-60 Black Hawk A/L production and fielding at the Aviation and Missile Command, product manager for Black Hawk modernization and Comanche interoperability and chief of the acquisition management branch at the Army Human Resources Command.

Marion also worked in the theater high-altitude air defense battle management and weapons systems engineering, integration and test offices at Lockheed Martin‘s space systems segment as part of the Army’s Training With Industry program as well as held the position of joint commander at the Defense Contract Management Agency–Boeing Mesa.

Government Technology/News
Leslie Caldwell: DOJ Issues Policy to Guide Prosecutors When to File Charges Under Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 31, 2016
Leslie Caldwell: DOJ Issues Policy to Guide Prosecutors When to File Charges Under Computer Fraud and Abuse Act


cyber-hack-network-computerThe Justice Department has released a policy that seeks to help federal prosecutors determine when to bring charges or launch an investigation under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

Leslie Caldwell, assistant attorney general for the criminal division at DOJ, wrote in a blog post published Tuesday that the 2014 Intake and Charging Policy for Computer Crime Matters lists eight factors for prosecutors to consider before they charge an offense under the law, such as the extent of damage associated with unauthorized access to computer systems or data.

Government attorneys should consider how unauthorized access to computer systems or data breach raises concerns in terms of national security, public safety and health, critical infrastructure and international relations, as well as the cyber crime’s impact on the victim.

Prosecutors should also take a look at the nature of the criminal conduct’s potential impact on a community or district and the deterrent value of a prosecution or investigation, as well as determine whether the defendant intentionally breached authority limitations when it comes to data access.

The policy also calls for prosecutors to consult with the department’s computer crime and intellectual property section before they bring cyber crime-related charges under the law, Caldwell noted.

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