President Bush will ask Congress to boost federal spending on information technology by $5 billion next year to continue fighting terrorism and to begin combining the computer systems of 22 government agencies under the Department of Homeland Security. . .. President Bush will ask Congress to boost federal spending on information technology by $5 billion next year to continue fighting terrorism and to begin combining the computer systems of 22 government agencies under the Department of Homeland Security . The government's technology budget would increase 12 percent from the $52.6 billion proposed for this year to $59.1 billion for next fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1. Of the total, spending on cybersecurity for fiscal 2004 would hit $4.7 billion, or more than Congress approved after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to federalize airport security. Some of Silicon Valley's largest companies said Monday that government contracts for those high-tech security tasks represent some of their best chances for growth in the coming year. The link for this article located at SVTech is no longer available. . President Bush will ask Congress to boost federal spending on information technology by $5 billion n. president, congress, boost, federal, spending, information, technology, billion. . Anthony Pell
The Homeland Security Office is evaluating applications to let agencies analyze links and relationships among information sets without breaching privacy laws or sparking interagency turf. . .. The Homeland Security Office is evaluating applications to let agencies analyze links and relationships among information sets without breaching privacy laws or sparking interagency turf battles. Steve Cooper, the office's CIO, said yesterday the goal of the current tests is to validate a data-sharing concept. The premise is that to better track information on possible security threats, agencies must at minimum share information about their data, he said at the Industry Advisory Council's Executive Leadership Conference. But fear of breaking privacy laws and the sense of ownership many agencies exhibit toward their data often keep the government from consolidating or even tracking information in useful ways, Cooper said. The link for this article located at GCN is no longer available. . National Security is assessing analytical instruments to improve inter-agency cooperation while safeguarding personal privacy.. Homeland Security, Data Analysis, Privacy Compliance, Security Tools, Agency Collaboration. . Anthony Pell
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