Processing....

Logo

Digital News Coverage of Government Contracting and Federal Policy Landscape
Sticky Logo
  • Home
  • Acquisition & Procurement
  • Agencies
    • DoD
    • Intelligence
    • DHS
    • Civilian
    • Space
  • Cybersecurity
  • Technology
  • Executives
    • Profiles
    • Announcements
    • Awards
  • News
  • Articles
  • About
  • Wash100
  • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit your news
    • Jobs
Logo
Government Technology/News
NASA Enters Climate Risk Modeling Partnership With First Street Foundation
by Regina Garcia
Published on September 23, 2022
NASA Enters Climate Risk Modeling Partnership With First Street Foundation

The First Street Foundation and two NASA research laboratories have teamed up to perform risk modeling work to quantitatively evaluate the impacts of climate events on the economy and raise awareness about natural hazards.

NASA said Monday its Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland and university-affiliated Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City will collaborate with the nonprofit in efforts to update climate models and risk measurement tools.

The agency expects to gain technical insight into the modeling approaches of First Street and adjusted risk data on specific properties.

“NASA Earth observations and model output are already publicly available, but this agreement with First Street enables us to work together to integrate our trusted observations, predictions and scientific expertise into improved products that will be freely available,” said Stephanie Schollaert Uz, applied sciences manager for Goddard’s Earth Sciences Division.

Ed Kearns, chief data officer of First Street, said the partnership offers an opportunity for the nonprofit to communicate with the government sector about climate change matters.

The agency presented at the Sept. 9 National Space Council meeting a concept and a video of the Earth Information Center being planned to give the public knowledge of how the planet is changing and support decision-making to address the problem.

Cybersecurity/News
GAO Identifies Data Environment as Emerging Battlefield in National Security
by Jamie Bennet
Published on September 23, 2022
GAO Identifies Data Environment as Emerging Battlefield in National Security

U.S. adversaries and competitors are exploiting social media, information technology and other elements of the information environment to undermine the country’s national security capabilities, according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office.

The government watchdog agency conducted a study on how the Department of Defense uses the information environment and its strategies to enhance cognitive security.

GAO data came from questionnaires given to 25 DOD agencies, interviews with department officials and subject matter experts, and reviews of 35 policy and strategy documents from the department and other federal agencies.

Results showed that the DOD’s most important deficiencies in protecting the information environment are in personnel, training, funding, organization and new technologies.

Respondents identified artificial intelligence and machine learning, bots, quantum computing, social media platforms as emerging tools that could be used as either a shield or a threat to the DoD’s missions.

The office recognized the Pentagon’s efforts to refine the concept of information in defense operations. Aside from its ongoing revision of doctrine publications, the DOD must boost organization and training in defense against social engineering, the report noted.

Cybersecurity/News
NSA, CISA Expose Malicious Actors’ Game Plan to Compromise Operational Tech, Industrial Control Systems
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 23, 2022
NSA, CISA Expose Malicious Actors’ Game Plan to Compromise Operational Tech, Industrial Control Systems

The National Security Agency and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency have released an advisory outlining the steps cyberthreat actors use to plan and carry out compromises against operational technology and industrial control system assets.

NSA said Thursday the cybersecurity advisory builds on guidance previously issued by the two agencies to mitigate OT exposure and stop malicious actors from targeting ICS.

“Owners and operators of these systems need to fully understand the threats coming from state-sponsored actors and cybercriminals to best defend against them,” said Michael Dransfield, control systems defense expert at NSA.

According to the advisory, the steps malicious actors follow to compromise ICS and OT assets are establishing the intended effect and selecting a target; collecting intelligence about the target system; developing techniques and tools to navigate and manipulate the system; gaining initial access to the system; and executing techniques and tools to create the intended effect.

“We’re exposing the malicious actors’ playbook so that we can harden our systems and prevent their next attempt,” added Dransfield.

The document also offers recommendations to help OT and ICS operators and owners to defend their systems from such threat actors.

These include limiting exposure of system information, identifying and securing remote access points, restricting tools and scripts and conducting regular security audits.

DoD/Government Technology/News
Lawmakers Call on DoD to Provide Ukraine With Unmanned Aerial Platforms
by Jane Edwards
Published on September 23, 2022
Lawmakers Call on DoD to Provide Ukraine With Unmanned Aerial Platforms

A bipartisan group of 17 House lawmakers wrote a letter to Lloyd Austin, secretary of the Department of Defense and a 2022 Wash100 Award winner, urging DOD to provide Ukraine with advanced drones to help the country reclaim the territory seized by Russian forces, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.

“Ukraine could better confront Russian threats with advanced [unmanned aerial systems] like the MQ-1C Gray Eagle or the MQ-9A Reaper,” the lawmakers wrote in the Wednesday letter reviewed by WSJ.

The legislators said the Pentagon should complete a security assessment of such UAS, which they think would provide Ukrainian forces with long-range precision tracking and targeting and continuous surveillance capabilities against Russian missiles and rockets.

Reps. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio; Adam Schiff, D-Calif.; Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich.; Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa.; and Rep. Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., were among the letter’s signatories.

General Atomics-built Gray Eagles could provide warfighters real-time intelligence and enable them to fire Hellfire missiles against adversaries. DoD declined to comment on the letter, according to the report.

General Atomics said it has been in talks for months with officials from the U.S. and Ukraine and is ready to train Ukrainian soldiers on how to use the unmanned platforms.

Cybersecurity/News
Bipartisan Bill Aims to Fortify Open Source Software Security
by Jamie Bennet
Published on September 23, 2022
Bipartisan Bill Aims to Fortify Open Source Software Security

Sens. Gary Peters, D-Mich., and Rob Portman, R-Ohio, have proposed a bill with the intent to strengthen the U.S. government’s security defenses against open source software vulnerabilities.

The introduction of the Securing Open Source Software Act was prompted by the discovery of vulnerability in the Log4j logging platform, which exposed federal systems and critical infrastructure to remotely executable malicious attacks, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee said Thursday.

The legislation would direct the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency to establish a risk framework that could be voluntarily utilized by government entities and critical infrastructure owners and operators that use open source systems.

Under the bill, CISA would commission a team of IT experts to facilitate a collaborative response between the government and community in cases such as the Log4j vulnerability. 

It will be the first legislation to codify open source software as public infrastructure, said Trey Herr, director of the Atlantic Council’s Cyber Statecraft Initiative under the Digital Forensic Research Laboratory. “If signed into law, it would serve as a historic step for wider federal support for the health and security of open source software,” he added.

Peters is chairman and Portman a ranking member of the committee, which convened a hearing in February on the Log4j incident. It was deemed as one of the most severe and widespread cybersecurity risks to date. 

Executive Moves/News
GSA Names 28 Members of Federal Buying Advisory Panel; Robin Carnahan Quoted
by Jamie Bennet
Published on September 23, 2022
GSA Names 28 Members of Federal Buying Advisory Panel; Robin Carnahan Quoted

The General Services Administration announced the 28 inaugural members of its Acquisition Policy Federal Advisory Committee during the panel’s first meeting held Thursday.

Troy Cribb, director of policy at the Partnership for Public Service, will serve as the chairperson and her co-chair will be Cassius Butts, chief strategy officer and managing partner of capital for Global Leader Group, the agency said Thursday.

“GSA plays a leading role, through our Federal Acquisition Service. It’s our responsibility to bring together top experts from around the country with practical, on-the-ground experience to help generate ideas for how we can improve the way government buys things and leverage the government’s buying power to advance important policy goals,” said GSA Administrator Robin Carnahan.

The other members are:

  • Jennie Romer, Environmental Protection Agency
  • Antonio Doss, Small Business Administration
  • Richard Beutel, George Mason University
  • Nigel Stephens, Phoenix Strategies
  • Luke Bassis, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
  • David Malone, City of St. Petersburg, Fl.
  • Mark Hayden, State of New Mexico
  • Stacy Smedley, Building Transparency
  • David Wagger, Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries
  • Anish Tilak, Rocky Mountain Institute
  • Kimberly Wise White, American Chemistry Council
  • C. Gail Bassette, Bowie State University
  • Nicole Darnall, Arizona State University
  • Steven Schooner, George Washington University
  • Amlan Mukherjee, Michigan Technological University
  • Farad Ali, Asociar LLC
  • Mamie Mallory, Mallory & Associates 
  • Anne Rung, Varis LLC
  • Keith Tillage, Tillage Construction
  • Clyde Thompson, GovStrive
  • Deryl Mckissack, Mckissack & Mckissack
  • Darryl Daniels, Jacobsen Daniels Assoc.
  • Susan Lorenz-Fisher, AmerisourceBergen Corporation
  • Kristin Seaver, General Dynamics Information Technology
  • Leslie Cordes, Ceres
  • Denise Bailey, Milligan Consulting
Contract Awards/Government Technology/News
Valiant Secures $49.9M Marine Corps Contract for Training, Readiness Technology Services; Tammy Schmidt Quoted
by Charles Lyons-Burt
Published on September 22, 2022
Valiant Secures $49.9M Marine Corps Contract for Training, Readiness Technology Services; Tammy Schmidt Quoted

Defense contractor Valiant Integrated Services has landed a three-year, $49.9 million contract from the U.S. Marine Corps to provide training and readiness tools and information.

The work is an extension of Valiant’s ongoing efforts under the Trackless Mobile Infantry Targets task order and will find the Valiant team developing and implementing semi-autonomous technologies as well as delivering data to training evaluators, the Herndon, Virginia-headquartered company said Thursday.

“This award allows us to continue to meet our customer’s live training needs with a set of innovative solutions that will result in the refined development of enhanced combat skills, previously only attainable in force-on-force training,” remarked Valiant Vice President of Global Training and Readiness Tammy Schmidt.

Schmidt additionally noted that the award is the latest in a history of collaborations with the Marine Corps that stretches back decades.

Through the latest contract, Valiant will prototype and deploy semi-autonomous, human-type TMITs that are able to navigate a live-fire training range and mimic the movements and threats presented by real-life adversaries for up-and-coming warfighters to engage with. Valiant is expected to furnish the TMITs to Marine facilities in North Carolina, California, Hawaii and Japan.

Furthermore, the company is expected to perform system operations and supply data for after-action review purposes, as well as maintain operational preparedness and design and update TMIT training situations and concepts.

Valiant will team with Marathon Targets to execute the work, which is the third task order they have received via the Marine Air-Ground Task Force Training Support Services indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract. The company has been a part of the MTSS IDIQ contracts since the program’s 2003 inception.

Earlier this month, it was announced that Valiant will compete for task orders in the Defense Threat Reduction Agency’s 10-year, $850 million contract vehicle. These will include modeling and simulation, exercises and assessment support, not unlike what they will be carrying out for the Marine Corps.

In August, the company won a five-year, $77 million contract from the U.S. Navy to run and sustain waterbound training mechanisms at naval air stations in Florida and Washington.

Government Technology/News
DOE Announces Pledges to Increase Semiconductor Energy Efficiency; Alejandro Moreno Quoted
by Naomi Cooper
Published on September 22, 2022
DOE Announces Pledges to Increase Semiconductor Energy Efficiency; Alejandro Moreno Quoted

The Department of Energy has revealed the inaugural set of companies and organizations that committed to double the energy efficiency of semiconductors every two years over the next two decades.

DOE said Wednesday the Energy Efficiency Scaling for 2 Decades initiative aims to establish a roadmap designed to guide domestic semiconductor research, design, development and demonstration efforts.

The Advanced Manufacturing Office, which leads the EES2 initiative, will build on the recommendations from DOE’s deep dive assessments of the U.S. semiconductor industry and gather information from stakeholders through a series of workshops to build the roadmap.

Microsoft, Intel, Micron, Synopsys, SRC and AMD are among the 21 inaugural signing partners of the EES2 initiative pledge.

“DOE is excited to work closely with industry to build the next generation of energy efficient semiconductors right here at home, bolstering domestic manufacturing and creating good-paying jobs for American workers,” said Alejandro Moreno, acting assistant secretary for energy efficiency and renewable energy.

Artificial Intelligence/News
Texas A&M University Opens Application for NIST-Funded AI Prize Competition
by Naomi Cooper
Published on September 22, 2022
Texas A&M University Opens Application for NIST-Funded AI Prize Competition

Texas A&M University is inviting the public to apply for a prize competition aimed at developing artificial intelligence systems designed to help first responders and smart communities interpret data from internet of things devices.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology-funded Smart Communities, Smart Responder AI for IoT Prize Challenge seeks to use the emerging technology to aggregate and present actionable environmental data to public safety professionals in real-time.

The goal is to create AI systems that work to ingest unknown data from various sources and evaluate and categorize the data based on metadata and other contextual information.

NIST’s Public Safety Communications Research Division awarded Texas A&M University approximately $1.2 million for the competition scheduled to open on Nov. 20. Interested parties have until Jan. 10, 2023, to submit concept papers for the challenge’s first phase.

During phase 2, a team of subject matter experts will judge the participants’ fully functional systems and select entries for a live demonstration event at the Disaster City in fall 2023. 

The first-place winner will receive a $100,000 cash prize.

Government Technology/News
DIU Showcases Energy Portfolio Projects at 2022 Pentagon Energy Expo
by Naomi Cooper
Published on September 22, 2022
DIU Showcases Energy Portfolio Projects at 2022 Pentagon Energy Expo

The Defense Innovation Unit is showcasing at the inaugural Pentagon Energy Expo several prototype projects designed to enhance operational energy capabilities across the U.S. military.

DIU said Wednesday its exhibit features four Energy Portfolio efforts that aim to equip tactical vehicles with hybrid energy-capture systems, develop high-performance microgrids with energy storage capabilities for extreme cold weather, prototype a multi-mission electric small watercraft and build 3D-printed expeditionary structures.

The Energy Portfolio program was unveiled in 2020 and has since launched 21 projects to build the resilience of military installations worldwide.

The Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment announced the expo to demonstrate energy technologies designed to improve warfighting capabilities.

The event exhibits more than 100 technologies in the areas of general energy; vehicle electrification; contingency basing and installation energy resilience; energy storage, distribution and generation; alternative energy sources; and software and cybersecurity.

Previous 1 … 723 724 725 726 727 … 2,617 Next
News Briefing
I'm Interested In:
Recent Posts
  • Trump Signs Executive Order on TikTok
  • Senate Confirms Retired Navy Vice Adm. Scott Pappano as NNSA Principal Deputy Administrator
  • GSA, xAI Partner to Bring Grok AI Models to Federal Agencies
  • Kristi Noem Backs Pete Hegseth’s Proposal for Coast Guard Civilian Secretary
About

ExecutiveGov, published by Executive Mosaic, is a site dedicated to the news and headlines in the federal government. ExecutiveGov serves as a news source for the hot topics and issues facing federal government departments and agencies such as Gov 2.0, cybersecurity policy, health IT, green IT and national security. We also aim to spotlight various federal government employees and interview key government executives whose impact resonates beyond their agency.

Read More >>

RSS ExecutiveBiz
  • Mattermost’s Matthew Heideman Discusses Future of Defense Collaboration, Role of AI, JADC2
  • Jim Haney Appointed Chief Financial Officer at Trident
  • Former Palantir Exec Dave Myers Joins Seekr as EVP of Forward Deployed Engineering
  • ECS Releases 2025 Cybersecurity Report Highlighting AI, Ransomware, Supply Chain Threats
  • Peraton IRIS Earns ‘Awardable’ Status in DOD’s Tradewinds Solutions Marketplace
  • 2F DevSecOps Tool Now Available on Google Cloud for FedRAMP High Use
RSS GovConWire
  • Navy Awards Raytheon $498M Contract for Multiband Terminals
  • Pete Hegseth Calls for Urgent Meeting With Top US Military Officers
  • NASA Seeks Information From Industry for $480M TEST4 Contract
  • AV Names Johnathan Jones Cyber & Mission Solutions SVP
  • State Department Clears Germany’s Request to Buy $1.23B in AIM-120D-3 Missiles
  • SAP NS2 Awarded $1B Army Contract for RISE With SAP
Footer Logo

Copyright © 2025
Executive Mosaic
All Rights Reserved

  • Executive Mosaic
  • GovCon Wire
  • ExecutiveBiz
  • GovCon Exec Magazine
  • POC
  • Home
  • Acquisition & Procurement
  • Agencies
    • DoD
    • Intelligence
    • DHS
    • Civilian
    • Space
  • Cybersecurity
  • Technology
  • Executives
    • Profiles
    • Announcements
    • Awards
  • News
  • Articles
  • About
  • Wash100
  • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit your news
    • Jobs
Go toTop