It's existed for less than two weeks, but analysts are already concerned that the newly-formed Department of Homeland Security's cybersecurity unit may not grow up to be the powerhouse of efficiency and expertise it was billed as. . . .. It's existed for less than two weeks, but analysts are already concerned that the newly-formed Department of Homeland Security's cybersecurity unit may not grow up to be the powerhouse of efficiency and expertise it was billed as. Nearly every government cybersecurity agency was swept in to the new cabinet-level Department's "Directorate of Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection" -- making the new directorate the single largest computer security organization the U.S. government has ever had. The Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office (CIAO), formerly part of the Department of Commerce, made the move, as did the FBI's National Infrastructure Protection Center. The Federal Computer Incident Response Center left the General Services Administration to head to the DHS. Even the Department of Defense's National Communications System, which handles emergency preparedness for telecom, moved to the new department. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Doubts emerge as experts evaluate the effectiveness of the recently established cybersecurity division within the Department of Homeland Security.. Cybersecurity Analysis, Department of Homeland Security, Government Efforts. . Anthony Pell
The FBI is considering important changes to its premier cybersecurity unit, responsible for protecting the nation's most important computer networks, but indicated Wednesday it won't dismantle the unit as some in Congress and the Bush administration have feared. . . .. The FBI is considering important changes to its premier cybersecurity unit, responsible for protecting the nation's most important computer networks, but indicated Wednesday it won't dismantle the unit as some in Congress and the Bush administration have feared. FBI Director Robert Mueller has outlined a plan on Capitol Hill in recent weeks to break up the $27 million-a-year National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC), formed in February 1998 to watch over the nation's systems controlling banking, water, power, telecommunications and government, congressional and administration sources said Wednesday. They added that they expected Mueller to make a formal decision as early as next week. The proposal affecting the unit, whose reputation has improved markedly in the past year after a string of early embarrassments, quickly raised concerns among some lawmakers, Bush administration officials and industry experts. They worried that a narrow focus by the FBI on criminal investigations into computer attacks might discourage corporations from disclosing details of threats and attacks on their private networks. The link for this article located at CNN is no longer available. . CIA explores major updates to its intelligence division, prioritizing the defense of essential infrastructure.. FBI Cybersecurity, Cyber Unit Changes, Network Protection Strategy. . Anthony Pell
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