Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Whitehouse to Release Long Awaited Cyber Security Report May 29th

By Kevin M. Nixon, MSA, CISSP©, CISM©, CGEIT©

Washington, DC – Tuesday, May 26, 2009 – 3:00 pm ET

The Whitehouse made the following statement today at the daily Press Office Press Briefing by Whitehouse Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.

60-Day Cyber Space Policy Review Report To be released May 29th, 2009

“The President will release the 60-Day Cyber Space policy review report at the Whitehouse on Friday, May 29, 2009. The administration recognizes the very serious threats Public & Private sector Networks face from cyber-crime and cyber-attack. Recognizing these threats the President has elevated cybersecurity to a major administration priority by undertaking an early comprehensive interagency review. The administration is also committed to establishing the proper structure within the government to insure that cybersecurity issues continue to receive top-level attention and enhanced coordination. The report is an important first step toward securing the nation’s cyber-infrastructure.”

In the early edition of Washington Post, staff writer by Ellen Nakashima in her article entitled “Obama Set to Create a Cybersecurity Czar with Broad Mandate - Shielding Public, Private Networks Is Goal” reported “President Obama is expected to announce late this week that he will create a "cyber czar," a senior White House official who will have broad authority to develop strategy to protect the nation's government-run and private computer networks, according to people who have been briefed on the plan. The adviser will have the most comprehensive mandate granted to such an official to date and will probably be a member of the National Security Council but will report to the national security adviser as well as the senior White House economic adviser, said the sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deliberations are not final.

The announcement will coincide with the long-anticipated release of a 40-page report that evaluates the government's cybersecurity initiatives and policies. The report is intended to outline a "strategic vision" and the range of issues the new adviser must handle.

Kevin has testified as an expert witness before the Congressional High Tech Task Force, the Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and the Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. He has also served on infrastructure security boards and committees including the Disaster Recovery Workgroup for the Office of Homeland Security, and as a consultant to the Federal Trade Commission.

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