US Cybersecurity Team Takes Shape
When President Obama last month named Howard Schmidt to be the nation's cybersecurity coordinator, he filled a gap in the federal government's cybersecurity command structure. Schmidt joins a group IT decisions makers who share responsibility for keeping Uncle Sam's systems, information, and IT infrastructure safe from threats that are growing in number and sophistication.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology is in charge of cybersecurity compliance guidance for federal agencies.
The Office of Management and Budget and Congress are highly influential in establishing cybersecurity policy.
The National Security Agency, Department of Homeland Security, and new U.S. Cyber Command are helping to protect both civilian and military networks.
Within each of those organizations, officials such as DHS deputy undersecretary Philip Reitinger are bringing new ideas -- and applying new pressure -- aimed at strengthening the nation's cybersecurity.
Who are other leading influencers in the federal government's cybersecurity efforts? They include Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander, director of the National Security Agency, who has been nominated to be commander of the forthcoming U.S. Cyber Command, and Ron Ross, a senior computer scientist and information security researcher at NIST, who oversees the FISMA Implementation Project.
US Cybersecurity Team Takes Shape Top US Cybersecurity Officials (InformationWeek - profiles)