
Bush's war on digital terror continues...
Published: 17 May 2005 08:50 GMT
The US House of Representatives is scheduled to begin deliberating a proposal to create an assistant secretary for "cybersecurity".
Over the last few years, a succession of government figures responsible for overseeing national cybersecurity have come and gone.
First there was Richard Clarke, a veteran of the Clinton and first Bush administrations who cashed out with a lucrative book deal. Clarke was effectively succeeded in quick succession by Howard Schmidt, known for testifying in favour of the Communications Decency Act, then Amit Yoran and Robert Liscouski.
Now Congress may try to quell some of the turmoil over at the Department of Homeland Security by creating a more prestigious post. Whoever fills it will be responsible for co-ordinating with other federal agencies, some of which have had spotty records in the past.
The position, long a favourite of congressional security hawks, would require an appointment by the president and confirmation by Congress.
In a recent interview, Chris Cox, a California Republican, said today's cybersecurity post needs a promotion. "That's of course something that we have been pushing hard for in the Homeland Security committee over the last two years, elevating the profile of cyber inside the Department of Homeland Security and inside the federal government."
According to the House bill, the assistant secretary would be charged with creating a "national cybersecurity response system" that would evaluate US critical infrastructure and "aid in the detection and warning of attacks" on it.
Currently the department's chief cybersecurity official is a low-to-mid-level official who is two levels of bureaucracy removed from secretary Michael Chertoff. An assistant secretary would have more access to Chertoff.
The assistant secretary proposal is part of a broader homeland security bill for the 2006 fiscal year. It also requires the department to establish a National Terrorism Exercise Program to "prevent" and "recover from" terrorist acts, including cybersecurity breaches.
Declan McCullagh writes for CNET News.com
We have an opportunity for a permanent DV cleared J2EE Consultant in the South West for a key player in the Defence/ Homeland Security market place. ...
Electronics Systems and Equipment for use in defence and Homeland Security Applications As an expert in the field of Laser Engineering and associate ...
SQL and PL/SQL A number of oracle developers are required by a well regarded business and technology consulting firm which is going through a period ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Dell PowerVault DL2100 Powered by CommVault - Spec Sheet
Data Protection Strategies: Deduplication for More Efficient Backups
True Convergence Demands a Communication Service Provider that Embraces a Customer-Centric...
Learn how Performance Metrics for Telcomm Expense Management Drive new ROIs and SLAs
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Mark Crichard Doing business with citizen developers: Beware the legal pitfalls Legal Eye: Make sure your business is protected from potential hazards
Tim Ferguson How CIOs can achieve post-recession success Q&A: McKinsey & Company on living in the 'new normal' business world