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The national security community is facing new challenges in the wake of COVID-19. With the coronavirus demanding social distancing and creating new calls for workers in some communities to begin ...
The dramatic expansion of teleworking by US schools, businesses and government agencies in response to the coronavirus is raising fresh questions about the capacity and security of the tools many ...
How Will Telework Security Evolve in Government? Security for teleworkers is continuing to evolve. Over the course of the pandemic, the Small Business Administration “had to scale its network to ...
The Social Security Administration last week gave the majority of its frontline workforce roughly three days’ notice that it was suspending their telework agreements en masse, in what union ...
Cyber Security Industry Alliance (CSIA), the only public policy and advocacy group dedicated exclusively to cyber security, last week released a report, "Making Telework a Federal Priority ...
The bipartisan Pandemic Federal Telework Act would make technology and security an integral part of telework planning and data reporting. Telework Workforce Management As federal agencies continue ...
Rick Kuhn, a computer scientist in the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Computer Security Division, is author of NIST Special Publication 800-46, Security for Telecommuting and ...
House Of Representatives Politics 'Get back to work': House Oversight to take on government telework in 1st hearing of new Congress The Jan 15 hearing will feature testimony from former Social ...
FIRST ON FOX: The House Oversight Committee found that prolonged pandemic-era telework has been “detrimental" to government agencies and new employee training.
Two days before leaving office, O’Malley signed an agreement with workers’ unions allowing a minimum amount of telework for 42,000 Social Security employees (98 percent of their staff).
Trump Telework Reversal Undermines Aviation Security, Ex-TSA Official Says Agency faces attrition of air cargo security experts if employees are forced to return to the office.
Meanwhile, as of last week the Air Force’s virtual private networking software could only support 72,000 people at once, according to a federal contractor who was also not authorized to speak on ...
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