Verizon expands federal offerings in the Mid-Atlantic

The General Services Administration has placed Verizon Federal Inc. of Washington on two contracts that let the company compete for $330 million worth of federal telecommunications business from Philadelphia to Richmond, Va.<br>

Internet caf's are morale booster for troops in Iraq

Thousands of U.S. soldiers in Iraq keep in daily touch with family and friends back home via Internet chats broadcast via satellite from troop tents.

Nanotechnology R&D bills move through Congress

The House and Senate have worked out differences in bills to fund and oversee research and development in the potentially controversial field of nanotechnology.<br>

'Guinea pigs' try top-level Common Criteria tests

The National Information Assurance Partnership has OK'd the first product evaluations at the highest level of the international Common Criteria IT security standards.

Cyber Eye: Wanted, dead or alive: malicious coders

Microsoft this month added an arrow to the quiver in the global war against malicious code by promising a six-figure payout for information leading to the conviction of whoever coded Blaster and SoBig.

CIO survey: FISMA is expensive but effective

The government is spending billions of dollars certifying and accrediting systems under the Federal Information Security Management Act, according to a survey of agency CIOs and chief security officers.<br>

Terrorism futures market gets second lease on life

The Policy Analysis Market in terrorism futures that created such a stir that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency dropped it like a hot potato in July is back. <br>

Number portability brings both opportunities and warnings

The government's telephone services overseer thinks number portability, which initially becomes available next week, will be more beneficial than problematic.<br>

New worm variant targets identity data

A variant of the MiMail worm became widespread today, trying to steal personal and financial information from users of an online payment service.<br>

NIST posts security control guidelines for comment

The National Institute of Standards and Technology yesterday released an initial public draft of recommended security controls for federal information systems.<br>

GAO: Universal E911 for cell phones years away

A lack of money and coordination at the state and local levels is delaying implementation of Enhanced 911 emergency service for cellular phones, according to a new report.<br>

Is government ignoring the threat of cyberterrorism?

The government has not been taking the threat of cyberterrorism seriously enough, according to the author of a new book on the subject.<br>

Handheld development tool gets FIPS nod

A developer toolkit created by Certicom Corp. has been validated for use with Palm OS 4.1 under the Federal Information Processing Standard required for federal use of cryptographic modules.

Effort to compromise Linux kernel foiled

A routine integrity check of Linux kernel source code last week discovered a Trojan horse that had been slipped into a copy of the open-source operating system.<br>

USPS strives to attract users to E-Postmark app

The Postal Service hopes to draw users to its Electronic-Postmark tool now that Microsoft Corp. has incorporated it in Office 2003 and XP.

Is HHS certifiable?

The Health and Human Services Department's public-key infrastructure will be the first broad civilian use of digital credentials and one of the first departmentwide uses of a revamped governmentwide e-authentication program.

Microsoft puts a bounty on virus writers

Microsoft Corp. today announced rewards of $250,000 each for the arrest of the writers of the SoBig and Blaster worms that attacked millions of computers running the company's Windows operating systems earlier this year.<br>

NIST puts money where the risk is

Computer security, intelligent data searching and a personal wireless service are among 16 projects funded recently by the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Advanced Technology Program.

PADC shortcomings hinder free patch service

Limits on capabilities and available licenses have kept federal agencies from using the free Patch Authentication and Dissemination Capability offered by the Federal Computer Incident Response Center, according to the General Accounting Office.<br>

Feds plan for common IDs by 2006

The Federal Identity Credentialing Committee will develop governmentwide standards to make machine-readable IDs acceptable throughout the federal government by 2006.

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