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Artificial Intelligence/News
Copyright Office Releases Notice of Inquiry on AI Policy Issues
by Naomi Cooper
Published on September 1, 2023
Copyright Office Releases Notice of Inquiry on AI Policy Issues

The U.S. Copyright Office has issued a notice of inquiry and request for comments on a new initiative to examine copyright policy issues raised by artificial intelligence technology.

The NOI was published in the Federal Register to seek “factual information and views” on copyright issues, including the use of copyrighted materials in AI training, the legal status of AI-generated outputs and the appropriate levels of transparency and disclosure regarding the use of copyrighted works to develop generative AI systems, the Copyright Office said Wednesday.

“We launched this initiative at the beginning of the year to focus on the increasingly complex issues raised by generative AI. This NOI and the public comments we will receive represent a critical next step,” said Shira Perlmutter, register of copyrights and director of the Copyright Office.

Interested parties have until Oct. 18 to submit comments. Replies are due Nov. 15.

Trusted AI and Autonomy Forum

Join the ExecutiveBiz Trusted AI and Autonomy Forum on Sept. 12 to hear from government and industry experts about the development of secure AI technologies for critical missions. Register here.

Cybersecurity/News
US Agencies, International Counterparts Issue Report on ‘Infamous Chisel’ Malware; Rob Joyce Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 1, 2023
US Agencies, International Counterparts Issue Report on ‘Infamous Chisel’ Malware; Rob Joyce Quoted

The National Security Agency, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the FBI and international partners have released a report on a mobile malware, dubbed Infamous Chisel, associated with a group of Russian military cyberthreat actors known as Sandworm.

Published Thursday, the report shows that Infamous Chisel exfiltrates information from Android devices used by the Ukrainian military through periodic scanning of files and provides network backdoor access through a Tor hidden service and Secure Shell. 

Sandworm has been known to target U.S. defense industrial base and government networks.

“Russia continues to leverage the cyber domain to advance its war against Ukraine,” said Rob Joyce, cybersecurity director at NSA.

“Our analysis offers guidance to help find and eradicate this threat, and raises awareness of this threat targeted by Sandworm malicious cyber activity. We will continue to collaborate across the U.S. government and with our international allies to eradicate cyber threats,” Joyce added.

CISA, NSA and the FBI jointly released the malware analysis report with their counterparts in New Zealand, Canada, Australia and the U.K.

News
Pentagon Creates Website to Provide Public Reports on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena
by Naomi Cooper
Published on September 1, 2023
Pentagon Creates Website to Provide Public Reports on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena

The Department of Defense has launched a website to provide publicly available information regarding the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, which reports unidentified anomalous phenomena sightings and potential threats.

DOD said Thursday the AARO website will give the public access to declassified photos and videos on resolved UAP cases and will feature reporting trends, a frequently asked questions section and links to official reports and other resources.

The website will soon include a secure reporting tool to enable current and former U.S. government employees, service members or contractors to contact AARO directly to report UAP sightings.

AARO was established in July 2022 to report and resolve anomalous, unidentified space, airborne, submerged and transmedium objects that may threaten military operations and national security.

Executive Moves/News
Douglas Robertson Promoted to CTO of Small Business Administration
by Naomi Cooper
Published on September 1, 2023
Douglas Robertson Promoted to CTO of Small Business Administration

Douglas Robertson, a product manager with over a decade of combined industry and government experience, has ascended to the role of chief technology officer at the Small Business Administration.

He announced his new post on LinkedIn and assumed the CTO role after serving as product owner and information technology specialist at SBA for three years.

In his previous role, Robertson led teams specializing in agile development, cloud professional services and enterprise applications and managed AWS Enterprise Hosting services across 10 program offices.

He previously served as a data analyst and incident manager at Interactions, a digital transformation company that offers intelligent virtual assistants powered by conversational artificial intelligence.

Executive Moves/News
Jon Hill Continues Post-MDA Career as Non-Resident Senior Adviser at CSIS
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 1, 2023
Jon Hill Continues Post-MDA Career as Non-Resident Senior Adviser at CSIS

Jon Hill, a retired U.S. Navy vice admiral and former director of the Missile Defense Agency, has been appointed a non-resident senior adviser with the Missile Defense Project and member of the project’s advisory board at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

He brings to the Washington, D.C.-based policy think tank decades of technical and leadership experience in missile defense research, development and acquisition initiatives, CSIS said Thursday.

Hill is vice president and chief engineer for training and logistics solutions at Lockheed Martin‘s rotary and mission systems business.

He also served as deputy director of MDA between 2016 and 2019.

His three-decade naval career included time as program executive officer for integrated warfare systems, director of cruiser and destroyer combat systems for PEO IWS and technical director for Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense.

News
Air Force, RTX Conclude Initial Flight Test of AMRAAM Missile Variant; Paul Ferraro Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on September 1, 2023
Air Force, RTX Conclude Initial Flight Test of AMRAAM Missile Variant; Paul Ferraro Quoted

The U.S. Air Force and Raytheon, an RTX business, have finished the initial flight test of the AIM-120C-8 missile.

Fired from an F-15C Eagle, this international edition of the AMRAAM missile successfully eliminated the aerial target and achieved each of the assessment’s primary objectives, RTX announced from Tucson, Arizona on Friday.

Paul Ferraro, president of air power at Raytheon highlighted AMRAAM’s combat-proven capabilities and noted its use by over 40 international partners for both air-to-air and surface to air missions.

AIM-120C-8 was developed under the Form, Fit, Function refresh. With this method, engineers used model-based systems engineering programs and additional digital technologies to improve multiple circuit cards and modern processors in the missile’s guidance segment and to re-host preceding software from the AIM-120D-3 and AIM-120C-8 AMRAAMS.

“With the advancements from F3R, which updates both the missile’s hardware and allows for future Agile software upgrades, we are maximizing the capabilities of this munition for allies around the world,” Ferraro said.

The team also recently completed the flight testing of the AIM-120D-3, which concluded only 11 months after its first flight test with a demonstration of the weapon’s capabilities in a contested environment.

In June, Raytheon received a $1.15 billion AMRAAM contract from the Air Force to manufacture AIM-120-D3 and C-8 missiles for the service branch and U.S. Navy as well as 18 other nations, including Ukraine.

Financial Reports/News
DOD CFO Mike McCord on Continuing Resolutions, Supplemental Budgets
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 1, 2023
DOD CFO Mike McCord on Continuing Resolutions, Supplemental Budgets

Mike McCord, undersecretary of defense comptroller and chief financial officer, said Congress and President Joe Biden have raised the Department of Defense’s funding by $100 billion in the last two years, but continuing resolutions continue to pose a challenge, DOD News reported Thursday.

“Support for the top line is great,” McCord, a past winner of the Wash100 Award, said at a conference. “Timing and timeliness of that support matter just as much. One thing that is not so great is this pattern of recurring, lengthy, persistent, continuing resolutions. These negatively impact our mission.”

He discussed how stopgap measures could impact DOD’s efforts to compete with China and the need to improve communication with Congress when it comes to stating priorities and hearing congressional concerns.

The comptroller also cited the four defense supplemental budgets developed in 2022 and how they reflect the ability of the Pentagon’s financial management community to address the needs of the National Defense Strategy.

News
DLA Vice Director Brad Bunn Talks Supply Chain Strategy, Highlights Role of Partnerships
by Ireland Degges
Published on September 1, 2023
DLA Vice Director Brad Bunn Talks Supply Chain Strategy, Highlights Role of Partnerships

According to Defense Logistics Agency Vice Director Brad Bunn, pre-positioning supplies and building a strong supply chain are critical to the success of logistics operations in contested environments.

During a panel discussion at the National Defense Industrial Association’s Emerging Technologies for Defense Conference in Washington, D.C., Bunn emphasized the pressing need to increase supply chain resilience and called for heavy collaboration with industry throughout the process, the Department of Defense said Friday.

Bunn highlighted DLA efforts to embrace artificial intelligence, advanced manufacturing methods and research and development to strengthen and scale logistics capabilities. The agency, he said, is running a “moderate research and development program” to address supply chain gaps and security threats.

“Most of that started with working with industry partners and R&D organizations to help buy down some risk of obsolescence for legacy weapons systems where we saw commercial capabilities wane and where we had to bring to bear some resources to buy down that risk in things like microelectronics,” Bunn said.

The agency has also prioritized addressing cyberattacks, which present a growing threat to logistics operations, as part of its supply chain security strategy. The significance of cybersecurity risks was demonstrated by the Colonial Pipeline attack, which pushed the DLA to consider how it could transport fuel to the east coast using other methods.

Described by Bunn as a DLA “superpower,” the Defense Working Capital Fund is another aspect of the DLA’s strategy. This revolving fund, he said, is used to cover the agency’s operating costs beyond the annual budgeting process using sales.

Bunn noted the strong partnerships it has formed within the defense industrial base as a key component of the agency’s success.

“It’s really about building those relationships with industry, putting those contracts in place and supplying our customers – the military service warfighters – with those common items of supply and some not-so-common items,” he said, adding that partnerships with the U.S. Transportation Command and international agreements have also helped the agency progress its mission.

DLA Vice Director Brad Bunn Talks Supply Chain Strategy, Highlights Role of Partnerships

Want to learn more about how the DOD is gearing up to tackle the challenges of the contested logistics era? Join leaders from both government and industry at the Potomac Officers Club’s Preparing for the Contested Logics Era Forum on September 14, where speakers and expert panelists will come together to consider how the United States can stay on top in contested logistics. To learn more and register to attend the event, click here.

News/Space
NASA Opens Facility for Advanced Aerospace Communications Research & Development
by Jamie Bennet
Published on September 1, 2023
NASA Opens Facility for Advanced Aerospace Communications Research & Development

NASA has unveiled an aerospace communications facility dedicated to the research and development of advanced radio frequency and optical communication technology.

The agency on Wednesday held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Multiple Asset Testbed for Research and Innovative Communications Systems, which is located at the Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.

The 54,000-square-foot facility, also known as MATRICS, features 25 research laboratories, rooftop and ground-based antenna fields and a radio frequency-shielded high-bay space.

MATRICS consolidates the workspace of 80 researchers previously scattered across the Glenn Research Center campus. They are expected to advance studies that apply artificial intelligence and machine learning to future low Earth orbit and deep space networks.

The site will also be home to a new quantum metrology laboratory, which will focus on the use of photons and quantum physics to transmit and protect data.

Cybersecurity/News
NIST Requests Comments on Draft Software Supply Chain Security Framework
by Naomi Cooper
Published on August 31, 2023
NIST Requests Comments on Draft Software Supply Chain Security Framework

The National Institute of Standards and Technology has opened for public comment a new draft report outlining strategies for integrating software supply chain security in DevSecOps continuous integration/continuous delivery pipelines.

The draft NIST Special Publication 800-204D aims to ensure that security measures are embedded in the agile software development life cycle to ensure the overall security of the software supply chain, the agency said Wednesday.

The NIST framework provides actionable steps to integrate the various SSC security building blocks into DevSecOps CI/CD pipelines to prepare organizations to deploy cyber-hardened cloud-native applications.

According to NIST, due diligence practices must be followed during the SDLC to prevent malicious threat actors from exploiting attack vectors and ensure that cloud-based software applications are free of defects.

Comments are due Oct. 13.

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