Are the ducks finally lining up on cybersecurity? The recent memorandum of agreement between the departments of Defense and Homeland Security, who for years have been butting heads on cybersecurity ...
Blog posts represent the views of CFR fellows and staff and not those of CFR, which takes no institutional positions. These attacks demonstrate that the food production sector is far from secure.
Critical Infrastructure Protection & Resilience North America 2023 will take place in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in the heart of the second largest region for key infrastructure in the U.S., March 7-9.
Sam Houston State University’s Hall of Fame celebrates the CSOs and CISOs redefining how America safeguards its essential systems. Threats to America’s critical infrastructure are becoming ...
In late June 2024, the Security Bureau of the Hong Kong SAR Government (the “Government”) proposed the first specific cybersecurity legislation in Hong Kong, tentatively entitled the Protection of ...
The convergence of IT and OT settings has opened up a new risk frontier, as older industrial systems that were never meant for connection now interact directly with the digital world. Many of these ...
COLUMBIA, Md., May 5, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Sealing Technologies (SealingTech), a Parsons Corporation company (NYSE: PSN), and leading defensive cyber operations solution provider for US national ...
1898 & Co.’s Managed Threat Protection & Response service leverages a variety of indicators and tactics, techniques and procedures to provide 24x7 threat monitoring. Since the beginning of 2020, ...
Dear HSToday Readers and Thought Partners, As many of you know, November 1 marks the start of Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience Month and I’m pleased to reach out to you today to join ...
SAN DIEGO, Dec. 06, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Genasys, Inc. (NASDAQ: GNSS), the global provider of Protective Communications solutions, today announced sales to three companies in the nuclear energy ...
The new level of cooperation between the Homeland Security and Defense departments could be a positive development for cybersecurity, writes blogger Brian Robinson. But other signs are less ...
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