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Coast Guard Reserve deals with data breach amid cybersecurity push
Home addresses of 7,554 individuals, and the names and employee identification numbers of another 3,146, inadvertently were released.
Opinion
How interoperability benefits military, civil and commercial domains
By focusing on interoperability, new capabilities can be quickly adopted and rolled out without significant system redesign.
By Dave Martin
Hit by OPM’s data breach? Bill offers feds free ID protection for life
Data breaches by local, state and federal agencies over the past eight years cost governments some $26 billion.
Opinion
Generative AI, automation to boost delivery of public services
The tech will enable agencies to meet need for quick and efficient public services, such as federal aid programs, unemployment benefits and tax filings.
By Mike Daniels
Opinion
How to evaluate AI use cases after Biden’s executive order
The potential benefits of leveraging an extensive repository or more than 700 AI use cases should not be overlooked, the author says.
By Dr. Pragyansmita Nayak
Opinion
Trusted data is the power behind the DOD CDAO’s AI adoption strategy
An open data lakehouse for trusted AI can increase flexibility to expand technology and analytics, while making the data more accessible.
By Rob Carey
Earth-mapping agency seeks more commercial imagery, data suppliers
The Luno A push is meant to meet “the increasing demands for commercial GEOINT,” according to Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth.
Opinion
Zero hour for Zero Trust: How data tagging can speed implementation
Currently, agencies take their own unique approaches to the data discovery process, the authors say.
By Ryan Zacha and Michael Lundberg
Opinions
Improving the citizen experience requires treating data like a product
Thanks to advances in technology, data sharing with the goal of improving the citizen experience can be achieved, the author says.
By Dan Tucker
Why US agencies buy personal info and what it means in the age of AI
The government faces legal restrictions on gathering personal information on citizens, but the law is largely silent on agencies purchasing the data.
By Anne Toomey McKenna, University of Richmond