A group of 28 IT, defense and integration companies formed a new consortium to develop technology standards and guidelines that will aid collaboration among military, intelligence, homeland security and law enforcement agencies. . . .. A group of 28 IT, defense and integration companies formed a new consortium to develop technology standards and guidelines that will aid collaboration among military, intelligence, homeland security and law enforcement agencies. Members of the Network Centric Operations Industry Consortium, launched Tuesday in Washington, said they want to improve the interoperability of their products so that previously disparate systems can share information. Companies such as Boeing, Cisco Systems, EMC, Ericsson, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, Raytheon, SAIC and Sun Microsystems are paying as much as $150,000 per year to participate in the consortium. The link for this article located at Jennifer Hagendorf Follett is no longer available. . 42 technology and aerospace corporations formed a coalition aimed at improving synergy within defense and public safety domains.. Interoperability, Defense Technology, Military Collaboration. . Anthony Pell
The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee Monday voted to increase funding for anti-cybercrime programs, despite claims from software and high-tech groups that last-minute changes to the bill could stifle innovation. The "Cyber Security Research and Development Act," sponsored by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., would give $970 million over five years to the National Science Foundation and National Institute of Standards and Technology to improve government computer and network security. . . .. The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee Monday voted to increase funding for anti-cybercrime programs, despite claims from software and high-tech groups that last-minute changes to the bill could stifle innovation. The "Cyber Security Research and Development Act," sponsored by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., would give $970 million over five years to the National Science Foundation and National Institute of Standards and Technology to improve government computer and network security. The technology industry supports the bill, but many businesses dislike changes made by co-sponsor Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., that direct NIST to set guidelines for security settings on many common software products used by the federal government. They argue that such language would put Uncle Sam in the role of setting standards for computer security technologies, and would gut the public-sector market for new security products. "The establishment of such technological standards would create a ceiling, rather than a floor, for federal government cybersecurity," said Robert Holleyman, president and CEO of the Business Software Alliance. The link for this article located at Computer User is no longer available. . The House Technology Committee endorsed higher budget allocations for cybersecurity initiatives, raising alarms among industry advocates.. Cybercrime Funding,NIST Guidelines,Government Security. . Anthony Pell
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