Uncle Sam cracks down on the use of fake diplomas in government

The Internet has made it possible for phony schools to proliferate and difficult for state and federal agencies to prosecute them, so the government will fight fire with fire, using a new Web site to help users distinguish legitimate schools from diploma mills.

SAIC sees future for FBI system

The FBI should fully deploy the Virtual Case File case management system despite the problems it has experienced and the criticism it has received, an executive of Science Applications International Corp. said last week.

NIST lays out new smart-card draft specs

The National Institute of Standards and Technology has released biometric specifications that firm up plans for governmentwide personal-identity-verification cards.

XML excises the Army's ancient forms system

When the Army embarked late last year on a mission to overhaul its antiquated approach to managing forms, officials turned to Extensible Markup Language.

An XML registry is key to sharing data

When the Federal CIO Council created its Emerging Technology Subcommittee in August 2003, Extensible Markup Language was high on its list of priorities.

GSA gets semantic with architecture reference models

The General Services Administration is one agency making strides in trying to find a path to the semantic Web through a pilot to encode Federal Enterprise Architecture reference models.

The promise of XML

For the Navy, the Extensible Mark-up Language provided a possible way to meet its FORCEnet objectives.

DHS sets timeline for enterprise portal initiative

The Homeland Security Department will start evaluating technologies and products in preparation for a March RFP for its enterprise portal initiative.

For '06, most agencies' IT budgets will be flat

When President Bush sends his fiscal 2006 budget proposal to Congress today, agencies that do not carry out defense or homeland security missions should expect flat or reduced IT budgets.

Congress aims to clear backlog of security clearances

More than 500,000 federal and contract employees are stuck in limbo, unable to do the work the government hired them to do.

People on the Move

b>Lisa Schlosser</b> took over as CIO for the Housing and Urban Development Department to- day.

NIST puts the word out on security safeguards

The National Institute of Standards and Technology and the National Security Agency have released a specification to standardize IT security checklists.

Six Quicksilver projects may get e-gov awards

Six of the 25 Quicksilver initiatives are among the 25 finalists for the Excellence.gov awards, given each year to projects that show the best practices of e-government.

Postal Service to consolidate servers, improve support

The Postal Service replaced all of its servers, PCs and notebooks two years ago, reducing the number of servers to less than 4,000 from about 20,000. But now USPS chief technology officer Robert Otto wants to consolidate further.

Patent office will get continued systems help from CSC

The Patent and Trademark Office awarded Computer Sciences Corp. a $280 million contract to continue providing systems development and integration, testing and training for modernizing business processes.

OPM public affairs officer Asher murdered

Warren 'Rusty' Asher, a longtime public affairs specialist at the Office of Personnel Management, was found murdered in his Washington home late last month.

NIH to make research publicly accessible

The agency is asking scientists to make their biomedical research results available through a searchable database within 12 months of publication.

HUD awards customer service contract to Premier

The Housing and Urban Development Department has awarded a $19 million contract for a contact management system.

Industry struggles toward interoperable Web services

Microsoft chairman Bill Gates is touting a new Extensible Markup Language architecture for Web services advocated by a three-year-old industry consortium.

Senators fume as FBI admits Trilogy foul-ups

After years of touting its Virtual Case File system as the pinnacle of case management software, the FBI told senators that the project probably has failed.

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