Share

Related Links

  • CyberMaryland
  • Elsevier Ltd is not responsible for the content of external websites.

Related Stories

  • SAIC, University of Maryland link cybersecurity centers
    Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC), a McLean, Va.-based consulting firm, has teamed with the University of Maryland to promote cybersecurity education, research, and technology development.
  • Cashing in on Security Training
    At long last, a cybersecurity career field has emerged. The (ISC)² US Government Advisory Board Executive Writers Bureau examines where employment opportunities lie and how much you can expect to be paid in this very important sector
  • Feds resist cloud computing over security concerns
    A newly released survey from (ISC)² shows that federal CISOs are avoiding cloud computing applications due to concerns about replicating IT security policy in the cloud.
  • Cyberterrorism: A look into the future
    Cyberterrorism might mean different things to different people, but one thing is certain – it needs to be taken incredibly seriously. What are we dealing with? How can we defend our nation? How will cyberterrorists of the future look to attack? The (ISC)2 US Government Advisory Board Executive Writers Bureau answers these questions
  • Educating children on data protection
    The use of biometrics and CCTV in school classrooms - installed to protect pupils - may just as easily put them at risk of other dangers. What, then, can be done to prepare our children for the big wide world of data protection? Rob Stringer reports…

Top 5 Stories

News

Maryland seeking to become a cybersecurity hub

13 January 2010

The Governor of Maryland set out an aggressive campaign to position the state as a national hub for cybersecurity this week, launching a report cataloging Maryland's current efforts in the cybersecurity and electronic intelligence space.

Governor Martin O'Malley made the announcement at an event labeled the CyberMaryland Summit. He lobbied for the creation of a National Center of Excellence for Cybersecurity in Maryland, which would include an incubator, laboratories for cybersecurity testing, and education and training facilities. It would be able to share information about vulnerabilities in IT systems, and it would include a team dedicated to advising state leaders on legal issues relating to cybersecurity.

He outlined the state's existing efforts in technology as reasons for the positioning of Maryland as an "epicenter" for cybersecurity. "Our world-class facilities — NIST, NASA and soon-to-be DISA — combined with our vibrant and growing private sector and talented universities uniquely position Maryland to lead the way in cybersecurity," he said.

DISA (the Defense Information Systems Agency) is the technical implementation arm of the Department of Defense, and will be moving from Virginia to Fort Meade in 2011. It will bring around 4300 advanced technology jobs into Maryland, the report suggested.

The CyberMaryland report laid out a four-part structure for the further development of the state's cybersecurity presence: education, leadership, communication, and innovation. A science, technology, engineering and math 'pipeline' in the school system, combined with a workforce training program, will help bolster education, it said.

Leadership will be encouraged by coordinating cabinet resources, while tying its activities to the national agenda on cybersecurity. The National Center of Excellence will help to bolster innovation, while the communication effort will focus on increasing public awareness of security and expanding job growth.

Maryland is also home to the National Security Agency, which forms the backbone for the US cryptographic and signals monitoring operation.

This article is featured in:
Compliance and Policy  • Public Sector  • Security Training and Education

 

Comment on this article

You must be registered and logged in to leave a comment about this article.