This is your Shared Security Weekly Blaze for January 14th 2019 with your host, Tom Eston. In this week’s episode: The US government shutdown and cybersecurity, privacy takes center stage at CES 2019, and a mobile location data controversy.
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Hi everyone, welcome to the Shared Security Weekly Blaze where we update you on the top 3 cybersecurity and privacy topics from the week. These podcasts are published every Monday and are 15 minutes or less quickly giving you “news that you can use”.
As of this podcast recording it’s been over 19 days since the US government shutdown due to Congress not able to agree on a bill for border security. This has meant that about a quarter of all federal departments (which is about 800,000 federal workers) are furloughed and the government is unable to pay people working for these departments. While we patiently wait for Congress to figure out how to end the shutdown, there is now cause for concern that because of this shutdown, US national security and cybersecurity may be affected, now and even into the future.
Even in a government shutdown, cybersecurity threats to the nation are not going to stop and in fact, attackers love it when a company or government is in chaos which means attacks will increase. Key departments like the new, two month old, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (part of the Department of Homeland Security) has had about 45% of its staff furloughed. In addition, the DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis, and the Office of Operations Coordination (which both provide security intelligence to the private sector and intelligence community is also on furlough. It’s also important to note other critical cybersecurity services like NIST (which stands for The National Institute of Standards and Technology) has 85% of its staff furloughed. NIST regulates federal agencies and provides security standards for the private sector which includes many new and updated risk management frameworks and guidelines on security controls. Besides cybersecurity, 90% of airport security TSA agents (who are actually quite underpaid) are working without pay and that has caused many agents to call off sick or quit their jobs. And that means longer lines for you at the airport.
Let’s hope that Congress and the President can up to some type of compromise soon, or we may see more longer lasting impacts to US national cybersecurity.
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Edgewise allows organizations to analyze the network attack surface and segment workloads based on the software and how it’s communicati
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