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Government Technology/News
Schuyler Moore: CENTCOM Working to Accelerate Tech Delivery to Support Warfighters
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 8, 2022
Schuyler Moore: CENTCOM Working to Accelerate Tech Delivery to Support Warfighters

Schuyler Moore, chief technology officer at U.S. Central Command, highlighted during a press briefing held Wednesday at the Pentagon the need to speed up the delivery of artificial intelligence, unmanned systems and other emerging technologies into the hands of warfighters amid rapidly evolving threats.

“And so what that means from a combatant command is that we’re really focused on technology experimentation and what that can look like to create sustained capability, and we believe that a combatant command is the right place for that because it is so critical to get these technologies into the hands of the person that uses it, in the place that they will use it, and against the threats that it will actually face,” said Moore, who was named CTO in October.

Moore responded to a question on how the command integrates AI into its combat operations in the Middle East. 

“We are very mindful and continue conversations with the policy team at all times about what the exact limits of what we can and cannot do in theater are for that,” she told reporters. “Where we’re really heavily integrating A.I. is into historical looking data, so that we understand the patterns of life that are happening in the region.”

She explained how CENTCOM uses AI to help inform the decision-making process and discussed technology development work at the Army’s Task Force 39 and the Navy’s Task Force 59.

Moore was joined by Army Sgt. Mickey Reeve, who talked about his counter-unmanned aircraft system training software.

Cybersecurity/News
Report: Pandemic Relief Theft Reflects Cyberthreat Group’s Potential to Expand Fraudulent Activities
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 8, 2022
Report: Pandemic Relief Theft Reflects Cyberthreat Group’s Potential to Expand Fraudulent Activities

Some cybersecurity experts and attorneys said the theft of U.S. COVID-19 relief funds by a cyber hacking group with ties to the Chinese government, dubbed APT41, demonstrates the ability of the group to launch larger fraudulent activities using data it has obtained from the U.S. public, Bloomberg Law reported Thursday.

The U.S. Secret Service told the publication APT41 stole approximately $20 million in pandemic relief funds, including Small Business Administration loans and unemployment insurance funds.

NBC News first reported on the Secret Service’s finding on the hacking group.

Data from a Mandiant study released in March showed that a hacking campaign launched by APT41 compromised personal data and at least six state government websites.

The American Enterprise Institute quoted Haywood Talcove, CEO of the government business at LexisNexis Risk Solutions, as saying, “at least 70% of the money stolen by impostors ultimately left the country, much of it ending up in the hands of criminal syndicates in China, Nigeria, Russia and elsewhere.”

“These groups are definitely backed by the state,” added Talcove, a three-time Wash100 awardee.

News
Sen. Rob Portman Details Homeland Security Provisions in FY23 NDAA
by Naomi Cooper
Published on December 8, 2022
Sen. Rob Portman Details Homeland Security Provisions in FY23 NDAA

Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, the ranking member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 covers 16 priorities he authored, such as measures to strengthen cybersecurity capabilities and disaster preparedness and response efforts.

Among the objectives added to the FY23 NDAA are technical improvements to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s authorizing statute and sharing of cybersecurity and counterintelligence data between the executive branch and Congress, the Senate panel said Wednesday.

The defense authorization bill also comprises a measure to establish an interagency committee for risk assessment and preparation to prepare for high-consequence events and a provision to provide short-term mental health and trauma support resources for first responders and disaster survivors.

Additionally, Portman proposed to expand the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s preparedness programming capability to address technological hazards.

“At a time when our country faces significant security threats from around the world, these provisions will help to ensure our local, state, and federal government has every resource needed to detect and deter risks, whether they be from cyberattacks, terrorism and violent extremism, or weapons of mass destruction,” Portman remarked.

Government Technology/News
NASA, ESAero Eye Inaugural Test Flight for Experimental All-Electric Plane
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 8, 2022
NASA, ESAero Eye Inaugural Test Flight for Experimental All-Electric Plane

NASA and Empirical Systems Aerospace, a San Luis Obispo, California-based small business, have unveiled an experimental all-electric aircraft, called X-57 Maxwell, and plan to conduct a maiden test flight of the plane in 2023.

ESAero developed the experimental plane through a number of NASA awards it secured under the space agency’s Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer program and partnerships with other small enterprises that acted as subcontractors on the X-57 project, NASA said Thursday.

Joby Aviation, Electric Power Systems, Sierra Technical Services and TMC Technologies became industry partners of ESAero, which provided air vehicle and all-electric propulsion design, manufacturing, analysis, diagnostic tools, integration, ground testing and software modeling support for the aircraft as the project’s prime contractor.

“NASA’s work with the private sector on this project has brought a lot of transparency to the industry, and the companies have been able to grow themselves,” said Starr Ginn, advanced air mobility lead strategist at NASA. 

“That’s a big part of SBIRs. The government takes on the high-risk ideas and helps mature them to where they become a viable product for industry,” added Ginn.

NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, and the agency’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland participated in the electric aircraft development effort.

DHS/Cybersecurity/News
DHS S&T Directorate Leads Initiative to Develop Cybersecurity Training Tools for Transportation Infrastructure
by Jamie Bennet
Published on December 8, 2022
DHS S&T Directorate Leads Initiative to Develop Cybersecurity Training Tools for Transportation Infrastructure

The Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate is working with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency to develop training tools for internet-based defenses specific to the automotive and rail industries.

The public-private initiative centers on two training platforms to be designed by the Idaho and Pacific Northwest national laboratories and included in CISA’s Control Environment Laboratory Resource testing programs, S&T said.

CELR currently has test environments for critical infrastructure such as electrical substations, water and chemical treatment plants, and building automation systems. The novel simulation device for the auto industry is a semi-autonomous electric vehicle that will be used for training, research, and analysis of online threat incident response. INL is leading the tool’s development.

For the rail sector, PNNL will create real-world scenarios of cyber threats in freight line operations, train and traffic control, and railway communications systems. “Our test environment will ensure that they are ready to mitigate or prevent these threats before they negatively impact these crucial systems and associated technologies,” said Thomas Edgar, a cybersecurity research scientist at PNNL.

The two test environments are still in early research stages but will eventually be part of CISA’s IT security suite.

Artificial Intelligence/News
Booz Allen Joins Forces with C3 AI to Accelerate Public Sector AI Implementation; Steve Escaravage Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on December 8, 2022
Booz Allen Joins Forces with C3 AI to Accelerate Public Sector AI Implementation; Steve Escaravage Quoted

Booz Allen Hamilton and C3 AI have teamed up to offer enterprise artificial intelligence services to the federal government.

The alliance aims to combine Booz Allen’s industry presence and C3 AI’s technology to address the unique needs of federal defense and civilian agencies and state and local governments, C3 AI announced from Redwood City, California on Thursday.

“An inflection point has occurred across the U.S. federal government enterprise where the benefit derived from leading commercial software products is noticeably increasing relative to the impact of bespoke solutions,” said Steve Escaravage, executive vice president of AI and analytics at Booz Allen and a Wash100 Award winner.

Within the partnership, C3 AI will contribute its applications that accelerate digital transformation, including those centered around mission readiness, supply chain logistics and intelligence analysis as the two organizations jointly go to market with the platform.

Services to be delivered under the joint endeavor include providing consultation aid to assess areas of need, delivering AI products and establishing training programs to enable the swift implementation of these offerings. Booz Allen consultants will also participate in training surrounding the C3 AI platform to best support customers in implementing the technology.

“This strategic alliance between C3 AI and Booz Allen is about delivering solutions to the U.S. government that solves their most pressing issues and paves the path for a smooth and broad transition to digitally enabled agencies with improved national security, citizen services, and governmental efficiency,” said C3 AI Chairman and CEO Thomas Siebel.

The partnership extends Booz Allen’s recent efforts in developing AI technologies and expanding into that market. In November, the company launched its Helix Center for Innovation to highlight many of Booz Allen’s technology offerings. One of the center’s major features is the AI Adoption Studio, which utilizes gamification to immerse guests in the end-to-end AI lifecycle.

Cybersecurity/News
AFRL, Partners Demo New Data Management Security Layer for Military Communications
by Jamie Bennet
Published on December 8, 2022
AFRL, Partners Demo New Data Management Security Layer for Military Communications

The Air Force Research Laboratory’s Information Directorate collaborated with Raytheon Technologies and other private entities to create a robust information provisioning layer for secure network management.

The RIPL technology was developed to support the U.S. Air Force’s various command and control programs, including the Air Combat Command’s Combat Cloud Vision, the laboratory said Monday.

RIPL uses artificial intelligence and machine learning to securely release critical data across networks based only on what users, such as warfighters, request and are authorized to access.

In a controllable and contested test environment, the technology demonstrated seamless and transparent data transmission despite weak internet connectivity. The demo, which involved accessing different types of information from multiple domains, also showed potential for data exchange linking air, space and terrestrial missions.

Brian Holmes, program manager of AFRL’s Advanced Planning and Autonomous C2 Systems branch, stated that RIPL will be beneficial to the USAF Advanced Battle Management System for joint all-domain command and control.

DoD/Contract Awards/News
AWS, Google, Microsoft, Oracle Land $9B Multi-Award DOD Contract
by Ireland Degges
Published on December 8, 2022
AWS, Google, Microsoft, Oracle Land $9B Multi-Award DOD Contract

Amazon Web Services, Google, Microsoft and Oracle have been selected for a multi-award, potential $9 billion cloud procurement vehicle from the Department of Defense.

The Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability program aims to provide military personnel with enterprise-wide, globally available cloud offerings across all security domains and classification levels from the strategic level to the tactical edge, the department said Wednesday.

Within the period of performance, contractors will be able to obtain global accessibility, available and resilient services, centralized management and distributed control, ease of use, commercial parity, elastic computing, advanced data analytics, fortified security and tactical edge devices as well as elastic computing, storage and network infrastructure capabilities.

Services under the contract will be carried out in Reston, Virginia and are expected to be completed in June 2028. The four hybrid firm-fixed-price and time-and-materials, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity awards will enable mission owners to directly acquire authorized commercial cloud services from all four companies.

The award follows a request for bids from Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Oracle to help address the Pentagon’s cloud computing requirements.

All four recipient organizations have recently expanded their cloud services work with the Department of Defense.

In August, the AWS Wickr program was made available on the department’s Cloud One. 

Earlier this year, numerous Oracle cloud services were granted Impact Level 5 provisional authorizations by the department to expand its line of offerings for defense and intelligence customers, while Microsoft received the Impact Level 6 provisional authorization for additional cloud services within its Azure Government Secret platform.

Google also received authorization for cloud services, earning an Impact Level 4 authorization for Google Workspace in July.

Contract Awards/News
Air Force Awards Akima, Amentum Joint Venture $334M Contract for AFB O&M Services; Scott Rauer Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on December 8, 2022
Air Force Awards Akima, Amentum Joint Venture $334M Contract for AFB O&M Services; Scott Rauer Quoted

Akima and Amentum’s joint venture, Akima Range Readiness Operations, has received a $333.9 million award from the U.S. Air Force for operations and management services at Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

The contract, which is the Air Force’s largest facility operations and management contract, has a performance period of seven years and was awarded by the 72nd Civil Engineer Squadron, the Herndon, Virginia-based company said Thursday.

“Akima is honored by this contract award, and the expansion of our support to the U.S. Air Force at a hub for sustainment as well as a home to many major flying units,” said Akima Facilities Solutions Group President Scott Rauer.

“This award demonstrates the expertise and deep resources that Akima and Amentum bring to ensure the readiness of our nation’s most critical military facilities,” Rauer continued.

Under the award, ARRO will deliver responsive installation and support services covering both natural and built infrastructure at Tinker Air Force Base facilities while supervising about 400 employees as they execute modernization efforts, continuous enhancement and operations support. The contract’s duties span 19 million square feet across over 425 major facilities.

Tinker Air Force Base is the primary site for the Air Force Sustainment Center, which delivers warfighting expeditionary capabilities to the warfighter through depot maintenance, supply chain management and installation support.

Akima’s logistics services department won an earlier Air Force award in July. Under the ongoing, $109.7 million contract, the organization is providing maintenance assistance to 58 U.S. Air Force Academy aircraft at two different locations.

Amentum has also been working alongside the Air Force. As stipulated by a $46 million contract awarded in June, the company has been supporting back shop maintenance operations for aircraft used in the 316th Wing and 89th Wing at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.

DHS/Government Technology/News
DHS S&T to Test New Remote Identity Validation Technologies
by Naomi Cooper
Published on December 7, 2022
DHS S&T to Test New Remote Identity Validation Technologies

The Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate will host a series of technology challenges in 2023 to evaluate remote identity validation platforms designed to combat identity fraud.

DHS S&T said Tuesday the Remote Identity Validation Technology Demonstration program will test the performance and fairness of systems to authenticate identity documents and assess identity verification attempts made by users using smartphone images.

RIVTD aims to develop secure, accurate remote identity validation technologies for use in commercial or government applications. 

DHS S&T intends to use the test results to inform efforts to standardize and certify technologies capable of preventing identity theft.

The agency will conduct the technology demonstration in collaboration with the Transportation Security Administration, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the Homeland Security Investigations Forensic Laboratory and other federal agencies.

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