ReportWire

Tag: CISA

  • Congress let a key cybersecurity law expire this week, leaving US networks more vulnerable

    [ad_1]

    There’s a long list of reasons US stability is now teetering between “Fyre Festival” and “Charlie Sheen’s ‘Tiger Blood’ era.” Now you can add cybersecurity to the tally. A crucial cyber defense law, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 (CISA 2015), has lapsed. With the government out of commission, the nation’s computer networks are more exposed for… who knows how long. Welcome to 2025, baby.

    CISA 2015 promotes the sharing of cyber threat information between the private and public sectors. It includes legal protections for companies that might otherwise hesitate to share that data. The law promotes “cyber threat information sharing with industry and government partners within a secure policy and legal framework,” a coalition of industry groups wrote in a letter to Congress last week.

    As Cybersecurity Dive explains, CISA 2015 shields companies from antitrust liability, regulatory enforcement, private lawsuits and FOIA disclosures. Without it, sharing gets more complicated. “There will just be many more lawyers involved, and it will all go slower, particularly new sharing agreements,” Ari Schwartz, cybersecurity director at the law firm Venable, told the publication. That could make it easier for adversaries like Russia and China to conduct cyberattacks.

    Senator Rand Paul (R-KY)

    (Kevin Dietsch via Getty Images)

    Before the shutdown, there was support for renewal from the private sector, the Trump administration and bipartisan members of Congress. One of the biggest roadblocks was Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee. He objected to reauthorizing the law without changes to some of his pet issues. Notably, he wanted to add language that would neuter the ability to combat misinformation and disinformation. He canceled his planned revision of the bill after a backlash from his peers. The committee then failed to approve any version before the expiration date.

    Meanwhile, House Republicans included a short-term CISA 2015 renewal in its government funding bill. But Democrats, whose support the GOP needs, wouldn’t support the Continuing Resolution for other reasons. They want Affordable Care Act premium tax credits extended beyond their scheduled expiration at the end of the year. Without an extension, Americans’ already spiking health insurance premiums will continue to skyrocket.

    In its letter to Congress last week, the industry coalition warned that the expiration of CISA 2015 would lead to “a more complex and dangerous” security landscape. “Sharing information about cyber threats and incidents makes it harder for attackers because defenders learn what to watch for and prioritize,” the group wrote. “As a result, attackers must invest more in new tools or target different victims.”

    [ad_2]

    Will Shanklin

    Source link

  • SOFITC Awarded Enterprise Network Contract for Department of Homeland Security

    SOFITC Awarded Enterprise Network Contract for Department of Homeland Security

    [ad_1]

    SOFTEK FEDITC, LLC (SOFITC), a joint venture of Softek International, Inc. and FEDITC LLC, has completed onboarding personnel for the single-award Homeland Security Enterprise Network (HSEN) Tier III Architecture/Engineering and Security Architecture/Engineering Support contract supporting the DHS’s Office of the Chief Information Officer (OCIO). This $40 million, two-and-a-half-year contract was competitively awarded on the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) Highly Adaptive Cybersecurity Services (HACS) Multiple Award Schedule (MAS) via an 8(a) competition. Under this contract, SOFITC will provide network architecture support, network engineering support and systems, and security engineering and architecture support for the HSEN coupled with sound project management principles, industry and ITIL best practices, and DHS, and other federally mandated, network architecture requirements.

    “This is our second major contract with DHS which enabled us to leverage knowledge of the agency’s processes to transition on-going cyber security and network activities seamlessly,” said Anshu Sinha, President/CEO of Softek, and Managing Partner of SOFITC. “Our team includes personnel with years of experience operating the existing network. We were also able to leverage our ongoing cyber security support to the agency.”

    To ensure low-risk, rapid-response resourcing, SOFITC Joint Venture (JV) members Softek International and FEDITC have partnered with Versar, a global project management company with 50 years of government experience, and Vista Global Solutions, LLC (VGS), an Alaska Native Corporation (ANC) and SBA certified 8(a) Program participant and a wholly owned subsidiary of Bristol Bay Native Corporation (BBNC), a $2 billion holding company with global interests across numerous economic sectors that has specialized in providing a broad range of professional and technical services to Government agencies since 1989. “Our teammates bring a wealth of experience, including support, to the DHS OneNet network which was integrated into HSEN,” Anshu Sinha, President/CEO of Softek, and Managing Partner of SOFITC, said.

    About SOFITC, LLC: Based out of Piscataway, NJ, SOFITC, LLC is a JV formed under the auspices of the SBA’s All Small Business Mentor-Protégé Program. Softek International is the protégé and managing partner and FEDITC is the mentor. SOFITC is a WOSB, HubZone, 8(a), Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB). In addition to the RMASS BPA, SOFITC past performance includes support to the Army, the US Air Force, the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), and the National Geospatial Agency (NGA). SOFITC core capabilities include Cybersecurity, Information Technology, Software Development, and Professional Services. 

    Source: Softek International, Inc

    [ad_2]

    Source link