Critical Update show

Critical Update

Summary: Nextgov's Critical Update explores the future of government technology. Each episode, we dive into how the government is using the latest tech and more importantly, you’ll hear from some of the people who are trying to make change possible.

Podcasts:

 Why the Pentagon’s Cybersecurity Certification Program Inspires Hope and Fear | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 25:29

Before the end of the year, the Defense Department intends to finalize a rule change that will require any contractor it engages with to have obtained a certification of its cybersecurity practices from an approved external auditor. The program—known as Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification—looks to eventually cover 300,000 contractors and subcontractors, many of which are anxiously waiting for the costs and details.

 Bonus Episode: Teleworking Securely During the Pandemic | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 32:44

Critical Update contributors Heather Kuldell and Brandi Vincent recently appeared on the GovExec Daily podcast and we’re sharing the full episode with you. Listen to hear about how CISA advice to federal employees for safer teleworking, NSA’s input on how to choose a video conferencing platform and other ways tech may smooth the way for workers to return to offices.

 How State Department IT Was Set Up to Deal with COVID-19 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 37:19

One year into managing IT for the entire State Department—his first government job—the agency’s CIO, Stuart McGuigan, is starting to see his early initiatives pay off. For example, a shift to the cloud paid off during the current COVID-19 crisis, as his staff and bureaus are well-suited to remote, distributed working. McGuigan shares which IT and budget management principles from the private sector he’s found still apply in government and the parts of his management style he’s had to adjust.

 How the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Plans to Run ‘Better, Cheaper, Faster’ Tech | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 25:44

The USPTO aims to approve patents and register trademarks as quickly as possible and CIO Jamie Holcombe is leading a massive technology modernization effort to make that happen. Even though the agency still relies on some COBOL and legacy systems, Holcombe’s team is rolling out automation, artificial intelligence tools and user-centered design to allow the workforce to finish their work faster.

 How CISA Defines ‘Trust’ in the Trusted Internet Connection Policy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 23:59

Federal agencies can’t just connect their systems to the internet; they must follow a policy called Trusted Internet Connection to ensure a certain level of security. The policy was recently updated and CISA provided use cases and a reference architecture explaining key concepts. The draft for the latter includes a concept called “trust zones,” which caused confusion related to the cybersecurity concept of “zero trust.” Nextgov spoke with people shaping the program and a critic to set the record s

 How the Coronavirus is Changing Federal Work | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 30:10

With the coronavirus pandemic gripping the nation, federal employees and contractors are dealing with unprecedented times while trying to work from home. Nextgov reporters came together for a roundtable discussion of our latest reporting on how the federal IT workforce is dealing with COVID-19 and leading the charge in response to a global crisis. GovExec Senior Correspondent Eric Katz also breaks down how the stimulus bill affects the federal workforce. Sponsored by Booz Allen Hamilton

 A Quantum Leap | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 23:42

We rely on a variety of different encryption techniques to keep our digital lives safe as we bank, chat and conduct business online. It takes today’s most powerful computers thousands, if not millions of years to break the strongest codes, but quantum computers threaten to crack through them in a fraction of the time. The National Science Foundation’s Thyaga Nandagopal explains where quantum efforts are now and where they’re going. Sponsored by Raytheon

 The Hidden Threats of 5G | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 21:23

If 4G networks connected everyone, 5G promises to connect everything—self-driving cars, service robots, wearable devices and sensors. But with more connectivity comes greater cyber risk and national security questions about network infrastructure, including how Chinese telecoms fit in. Nextgov talks to former FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler, current FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, and former national security adviser Robert Spalding about whether America can keep the edge it established during the 4G boom.

 The Defender’s Dilemma | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 26:33

Salary caps, lengthy onboarding and rigid career ladders have historically made it hard for federal agencies to recruit top cyber talent. Nextgov talks to Homeland Security Department’s Chief Human Capital Officer Angela Bailey and former undersecretary for the National Protection and Programs Directorate Suzanne Spaulding about the challenges the agency faces when recruiting cybersecurity pros and how officials have tried to overcome them. Sponsored by Raytheon

 How Hackers Get Stuck In HADES | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 32:08

They say you catch more flies with honey, and a research team at Sandia National Laboratories has taken that to heart. The team—led by Vince Urias, a distinguished member of the technical staff, Caleb Loverro, principal member of the technical staff, and Will Stout, senior member of the technical staff—created a massive honeypot to lure hackers into a fake environment. From there, defenders can gain valuable insight into who is attacking the system and what they appear to be after.

 Coming soon: The New Cyber Landscape | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 02:24

Critical Update is coming back! Heather and Aaron preview Season 4, “The New Cyber Landscape.”

 Containing Chernobyl | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 25:37

In the late 1990s, Eric Schmieman, then-chief engineer at Battelle Memorial Institute, and his team were tapped to head to Chernobyl to build a never-before-attempted containment system for the radioactive facility. The New Safe Confinement team faced difficult bureaucratic conditions left in the wake of the Soviet Union’s collapse plus other barriers that may sound familiar to many federal employees trying to solve problems in innovative ways.

 How the Labor Department Works to Hook Its Employees | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:11

“If you care about people, they’ll care about their work,” Labor Department Director of Employee Engagement Kristin McNally told Nextgov. Figuring out clever ways to engage employees can pay off big for agencies. Engaged employees perform better, but in the long run, the agency wins by being able to retain great workers.

 Improving the Tech That Feeds America | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 23:59

In the latest episode of Critical Update, USDA’s Undersecretary for Farm Production and Conservation, Bill Northey, joins Nextgov’s Brandi Vincent to highlight how the agency is leveraging new technologies to enhance its service to farmers and producers across America. For Northey, such an endeavor—continuing to operate while simultaneously making improvements and introducing new tech—is “like driving a car down the road 70 miles an hour and changing your tire at the same time.”

 Inside DARPA’s DARPA | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 24:15

DARPA was created when Russia launched Sputnik and the U.S. had no response. And within DARPA, the Defense Sciences Office tackles forward-looking tech issues so the country is never caught off guard by another “technology surprise.” Nextgov’s Jack Corrigan chats with DSO Director Valerie Browning to discuss the implications of machines that can think, when we should expect our first personal quantum computer and why more money doesn’t always mean more results when it comes to government research.

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