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Government Technology/News
Dell’s Cameron Chehreh: Govt Legacy Software Structure is Main IT Modernization Challenge
by Ramona Adams
Published on August 17, 2016
Dell’s Cameron Chehreh: Govt Legacy Software Structure is Main IT Modernization Challenge


Cameron-Chehreh-GDIT-EM
Cameron Chehreh

Cameron Chehreh, chief technology officer at Dell’s federal business, has said the structure of legacy software for government off-the-shelf products is the main challenge facing the government’s information technology modernization efforts in an interview with Signal Magazine posted Tuesday.

Chehreh told the publication the use of virtualization technology, software-defined networking and virtualized data centers as well as gradual modernization efforts could help to address risks.

A Dell-sponsored survey of 100 federal IT leaders says 71 percent of respondents claim they run “important” applications through outdated operating systems.

Chehreh added government organizations should get their staff to support “the real imperative to modernize,” Jontz reported.

Government Technology/News
Hacker Group to Auction Off Supposed NSA Data From Breached Computer Systems
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 17, 2016
Hacker Group to Auction Off Supposed NSA Data From Breached Computer Systems


cyber-hack-network-computerA hacker group known as “Shadow Brokers” plans to auction off files it claims it has stolen from the computer systems of “Equation Group” cyber spies linked with the National Security Agency, Wired reported Monday.

Andy Greenberg writes that Shadow Brokers released an encrypted file that has a decryption key offered for sale in a bitcoin auction, as well as a sample of the stolen data with 300 megabytes worth of code that match NSA-used cyber exploits.

The group posted its claim on the data theft in a now-deleted post to the microblogging site Tumblr, the report said.

Matt Suiche, founder of incident response firm Comae Technologies, has said the released sample files also include previously unpublished exploits that targeted Cisco, Juniper, Fortigate and Topsec equipment.

The report added that Claudio Guarnieri, a researcher at the University of Toronto, also pointed to a match with NSA code included in the 2013 data leak by Edward Snowden.

Wired noted some security researchers think that the leak may be a deceptive operation designed to confuse potential investigators of the hack.

Government Technology/News
NASA Seeks Participants for Space Robotics Technology Challenge
by Ramona Adams
Published on August 17, 2016
NASA Seeks Participants for Space Robotics Technology Challenge


NASA RobotNASA has partnered with Space Center Houston and innovation consulting firm NineSigma to launch a $1 million prize competition that seeks to foster technology development in the area of robotic dexterity to support the agency’s Journey to Mars initiative.

The Space Robotics Challenge seeks teams to program a virtual robot based on NASA’s Robonaut 5 to perform tasks in a simulated environment that involves latency periods to represent communications delay from Earth to Mars, the agency said Wednesday.

“Precise and dexterous robotics, able to work with a communications delay, could be used in spaceflight and ground missions to Mars and elsewhere for hazardous and complicated tasks, which will be crucial to support our astronauts,” said Monsi Roman, manager of NASA’s Centennial Challenges program.

The agency noted it will challenge participants to align a communications dish, repair a solar array or fix a habitat leak on a Martian habitat with virtual robots.

NASA also looks to integrate software that will be developed through the competition with old and future robotic technology platforms.

Technology could help robots to set up habitats, life support systems, communications and solar apparatuses as well as conduct preliminary scientific research ahead of astronauts’ arrival at landing sites, according to the agency.

The Space Robotics Challenge’s qualifying round will occur from September to November and an open practice will take place from January to early June 2017.

NASA is slated to hold the final virtual competition in June next year.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
Mary Davie: GSA Forms Single Telecom Services Program to Prepare for EIS Contract Award
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 17, 2016
Mary Davie: GSA Forms Single Telecom Services Program to Prepare for EIS Contract Award


Mary Davie
Mary Davie

The General Services Administration has combined one program office and 11 regional programs for network services to form a single national program that will work to facilitate the procurement of regional and wide-area network telecommunications services by federal agencies.

Mary Davie, assistant commissioner of the integrated technology service office at GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service, wrote in a blog post published Tuesday that the agency made such a move in July in preparation for the award of the Enterprise Infrastructure Solutions contract vehicle.

EIS is a 15-year procurement vehicle that aims to meet federal agencies’ requirements for information technology telecom services as well as implement GSA’s Network Services 2020 strategy.

GSA expects the contract vehicle to be available for use by agencies in fiscal year 2017.

Davie said GSA will implement a single fee for local telecom services and introduce separate mailboxes for service requests and telecom problem reports through the consolidated national network services program.

The agency has also introduced a website and handbook that seek to guide agencies on how to adopt the EIS contract vehicle in order to meet the May 2020 deadline for the transition, she noted.

Davie also advised agencies to complete and submit their EIS transition plans to GSA by October.

Government Technology/News
Denise Turner Roth: GSA Rolls Out Cyber Special Item Number in Support of White House Cybersecurity Plan
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 17, 2016
Denise Turner Roth: GSA Rolls Out Cyber Special Item Number in Support of White House Cybersecurity Plan


Denise Turner Roth
Denise Turner Roth

The General Services Administration has launched a new special item number for cybersecurity platforms and services and collaborated with other federal agencies to develop procurement support to facilitate cyber vulnerability assessments of government information technology systems.

GSA Administrator Denise Turner Roth wrote in a blog post published Monday such actions are part of GSA’s initiative to update its acquisition vehicles in support of the Obama administration’s Cybersecurity National Action Plan.

GSA has also implemented the “Making It Easier to Work With Government” program that seeks to help small businesses and vendors of cybersecurity products and services secure contracts through the agency’s multiple award schedules, said Roth, an inductee into Executive Mosaic’s Wash100 for 2016.

She also cited that GSA has made updates to the Acquisition Gateway’s IT category and has notified procurement and program managers about cybersecurity-focused acquisition vehicles.

GSA’s 18F digital services team has teamed up with the Office of Management and Budget to help draft guidance that seeks to help agencies develop implementation plans for legacy IT system updates in support of CNAP, Roth added.

Government Technology/News
Lawrence Strickling: NTIA Will Let IANA Contract Expire on October 1
by Ramona Adams
Published on August 17, 2016
Lawrence Strickling: NTIA Will Let IANA Contract Expire on October 1


cybersecurityThe National Telecommunications and Information Administration will not renew its Internet Assigned Numbers Authority functions contract with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers after the pact expires on October 1.

NTIA Administrator Lawrence Strickling wrote in a blog post published Tuesday ICANN reported that it has completed or will complete tasks for the IANA transition by the end of the contract term.

The transition marks the last step in an 18-year U.S. government effort to privatize the internet domain name system, Strickling added.

In June, NTIA determined that a proposal from the internet multistakeholder community meets the agency’s criteria on the transition of NTIA’s stewardship role over DNS.

The agency established the criteria in March 2014 while ICANN gathered internet stakeholders to develop a transition plan that will meet NTIA’s requirements.

NTIA partnered with ICANN in 1998 to relinquish the agency’s control over technical DNS coordination and management functions to the private sector.

News/Profiles
British Duke Gerald Grosvenor Dead at 64, Backed UK Soldier Hospital Construction Project
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 17, 2016
British Duke Gerald Grosvenor Dead at 64, Backed UK Soldier Hospital Construction Project


British Duke Gerald Grosvenor Dead at 64, Backed UK Soldier Hospital Construction Project
Gerald Grosvenor

Gerald Grosvenor, Duke of Westminster, has died at the age of 64 in his 22,000-acre Abbeystead Estate in Lancashire, England due to a heart attack, the New York Times reported Monday.

Sam Roberts writes throughout Grosvenor’s stint as Duke of Westminster he served as Grosvenor Estate‘s chairman of trustees and held the title of the country’s richest landowner with an estimated $12 billion in wealth.

Grosvenor launched a program to invest $390.2 million into the relocation of the Defense and National Rehabilitation Center in Headley Court to a new purpose-built location at Stanford Hall that will provide immediate access to on-site patient diagnosis and treatment plans.

“His personal vision and ambition to create the Defense and National Rehabilitation Centre is an inspiration, and his legacy will continue to touch the lives of soldiers and their families for decades to come,” Teresa Carlson, Amazon Web Services public sector leader, told Fedscoop.

“The Duke of Westminster’s selfless commitment to the care of all of the United Kingdom’s soldiers inspired us in the United States in our own responsibilities to our veterans. In doing so the Duke strengthened the crucial military alliance between the US and the UK Armed Forces to help ensure the safety of the international community at a precariously dangerous time in global politics,” retired Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mike Mullen said in a statement.

Mullen holds the title of honorary president for the American Friends of Black Stork organization, a US-based nonprofit that supports the U.K. DNRC.

The 425,000-square acre Stanford Hall facility will be four times bigger than the Headley Court facility and feature a 224 patient bed capacity, gyms and physiotherapy spaces, pool complex and a rehabilitation research center with a gait lab and virtual reality unit.

News
Marine Corps Embraces Smaller Surveillance Sensor; John Covington Comments
by Jay Clemens
Published on August 17, 2016
Marine Corps Embraces Smaller Surveillance Sensor; John Covington Comments


The Marine CorpsThe U.S. Marine Corps has adopted a smaller measurement and signature intelligence sensor to conduct remote surveillance operations and deployed the platform six months ahead of schedule.

Marines will use the Magnetic Intrusion Detector II to detect and identify vehicles and rifle-sized objects that move within its electromagnetic fields, USMC said Tuesday.

“MAGID provides not only target detection and direction information, but also magnetic disturbance readout, indicating the size of the target,” said John Covington, project officer for the Tactical Remote Sensor System in the Marine Intelligence program office.

“The new MAGID II is multi-directional, meaning the magnetic changes can be detected no matter where the device is pointed,” Covington added.

MAGID II operates with other devices built to detect seismic, acoustic and infrared activity as part of continuous surveillance missions in key areas.

Civilian/News
GAO: Office of Government Ethics Should Identify Other Agencies With Special Govt Employee Data Reporting Challenges
by Jane Edwards
Published on August 17, 2016
GAO: Office of Government Ethics Should Identify Other Agencies With Special Govt Employee Data Reporting Challenges


workforceThe Government Accountability Office has called on the Office of Government Ethics to determine whether other federal agencies have experienced difficulties in reporting data on special government employees who do not serve on federal boards.

GAO made the recommendation after it found that the Department of Health and Human Services, Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the State Department encountered challenges on how to differentiate SGEs on federal boards from those who are not, the congressional audit agency said in a report released Monday.

“Weak internal coordination and misunderstanding about the SGE designation contributed to the identification challenges,” GAO said in the report.

“Stronger data would better position agencies to report on SGEs and provide the required ethics training.”

According to the report, federal agencies hired an annual average of approximately 2,000 SGEs between 2005 and 2014 and that approximately 3 percent of 40,424 SGEs were not on federal boards and served as consultants as of December 2014.

GAO also found that agencies hire SGEs to serve in specialized areas, such as the Justice Department’s recruitment of a compensation fund attorney in support of a 9/11 victim and employment of professionals by the National Science Foundation to perform scientific research work.

Three of the five selected federal agencies – HHS, DOJ, State Department, NRC, NSF – tapped consultants to hire non-federal board serving SGEs, while the other two used their agency-specific authorities to appoint such employees, the report added.

Civilian/News
DOE Selects 12 Projects for Energy System Infrastructure Defense Effort; Ernest Moniz Comments
by Scott Nicholas
Published on August 17, 2016
DOE Selects 12 Projects for Energy System Infrastructure Defense Effort; Ernest Moniz Comments


transmission tower against the sun during sunsetThe Energy Department has allotted $34 million in funds for 12 projects designed to harden systems against attacks in support of Secretary Ernest Moniz’ call for more investments in U.S. energy emergency responses.

DOE said Tuesday the funds will go to energy sector organizations through the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability’s Cybersecurity of Energy Delivery Systems program.

Funded projects include two in Washington state and will cover cybersecurity education for energy sector professionals and research and development of tools for the energy infrastructure.

“The Department of Energy uses its expertise in transformative science and technology solutions to support and enhance our Nation’s emergency response capabilities,” said Moniz.

Moniz added the department applies various systems through private and public partnerships to help prepare for emergencies, mitigate risks and boost restoration and recovery from incidents that impact the energy sector.

Details on the 12 projects that were awarded funds can be found on the Energy Department’s website.

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