INTERVIEW: R. Michael Green, Defense PKI chief

As director of the Defense Department's Public-Key Infrastructure Program Management Office, R. Michael Green helps set and implement PKI policy for use across Defense.

R. Michael Green
Previously, Green was chief of the Customer Support Services Office with the National Security Agency's Information Systems Security Organization. In that job, he assisted with information security within NSA and supported military and national security organizations throughout DOD.
Green also served as chief of the agency's National Information Infrastructure Program Management Office, which supported the Clinton administration's information technology initiatives.
In previous management positions, Green has directed the development of technology and standards for automated, secure electronic-key management techniques; led development of new digital secure voice applications; and led teams fielding microwave protection methods for commercial switched networks.
He also assisted research and development groups in creating special mathematical tools.
Green represents NSA on the Council of Representatives to the National Communications Systems, the Security Working Group of the Chief Information Officers Council and the State Department's Overseas Security Advisory Council.'
Green, a Washington native, received a bachelor's degree in mathematics from the University of Maryland.
GCN:'What's the status of deploying Class 4 certificates for the transmission of unclassified, mission-critical but high-level information over unencrypted lines? Will Class 4 certificates be used as the baseline for sensitive-but-unclassified messaging, or will you stick with Class 3 certificates, a slightly less-secure level?
GCN:'Explain the difference between hardware and software encryption?
GCN:'Some vendors have complained that the department is too reliant on Netscape Communications Corp. through Defense Information Systems Agency site licensing agreements. What's your view?
GCN:'What are some of the technical challenges you are facing in making certificates available? What are some of the early adopters saying about how the technology is working?
| What's More |
GCN:'What are some of the lessons DOD learned from the Defense Message System deployment?
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