The best job in America or a living nightmare? – Politico

In interviews in recent days, several governors told POLITICO they have found their new circumstances and the re-ordering of their own personal and political priorities to be all-consuming. | POLITICO illustration/Getty Images; The State Journal-Register, Michigan Executive Office of the Governor, The Record via AP

It is sometimes called the best job in American politics. The nations governors have a degree of prestige, autonomy and agenda-setting power in their states that far surpasses anything enjoyed by the typical politician.

In almost every state, they also get to live in an elegant mansion as part of the bargain.

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For at least the next year on the front lines of the public health and economic wreckage caused by the coronavirus anyone holding one of these supposed dream jobs is going to have some long nights that might more closely resemble nightmares.

The 50 governors now have a centrality in American life that exceeds anything seen in generations. Every path forward for the country, from opening schools to reviving the economy and some semblance of normal routines, travels through their offices. But with the pandemic now at the six-month mark and its lasting consequences likely to be several times that length this new influence comes freighted with paradox:

In many states, governors like New Yorks Andrew Cuomo have seen their popularity surge by 20 and 30 percentage points as voters express approval of strong executive actions and empathetic leadership styles. But there is mounting evidence that these increases could prove highly perishable. Hard-won gains in bringing the viral transmission to heel in places like California have been reversed quickly with new outbreaks. States are facing massive budget shortfalls that will lead to deep and widespread cuts in services. Twenty percent cuts are being raised as a possibility in Albany, and 15 percent one state over in Trenton hardly the type of moves that will engender affection toward governors.

The broad agenda-setting power prized by governors is about to narrow considerably. In many places, ideas that seem like extracurricular assignments or require new funds are crowded out by the imperative of pandemic recovery. Theres simply too much competition for time and money.

Far from being autonomous leaders, the governors are staring at a new reality: Vastly increased dependence on the federal government. The Illinois treasurer this week warned of an economic tidal wave heading toward state governments, which are collectively pleading for $500 billion in assistance in the latest pandemic rescue package. It is a conceit of governors probably an accurate one in most cases that they practice a different and superior brand of politics than is the norm in Washington. It is a role more concerned with actions than words, less concerned with abstract battles over ideology and identity than with the concrete human dimensions of problems. In the current climate, governors will have to care a lot about, and become good at navigating, the politics of Washington they profess to disdain.

It is this intersection between the national capital and 50 state capitals that will be a principal theme for POLITICOs The Fifty, a new series that examines the ways in which governors, mayors and other political figures are shaping the nations future. The pandemic, more than any crisis in recent memory, has an intimate edge. It affects not just some citizens, but virtually every citizen, in an immediate and tangible way at work and home. As state and local governments are much closer to the stuff of daily life and have more direct responsibility for public health so too will they be the more relevant and vibrant arenas for creating post-pandemic America.

In interviews in recent days, several governors told POLITICO they have found their new circumstances and the re-ordering of their own personal and political priorities to be all-consuming.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker. | Justin L. Fowler/The State Journal-Register via AP Photo

Its tremendously frustrating in terms of my time and my focus, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said in an interview. I didnt run for governor thinking I was going to spend every day now for six months focused on the most basic thing of all, which is keeping people alive.

A global pandemic was not on the radar when I ran for governor, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer told POLITICO. For Whitmer, the coronavirus, the recession that ensued, the national trauma over racial disparities after the George Floyd killing, and devastating floods in her state have in some way melded into a singular, extreme moment: In ordinary times, one of these crises would consume all your energy. And yet, right now, we have to be able to manage all of these crises and do the day-to-day work of state government. We have an ambitious agenda that we still plan to pursue, but certainly this has taken all of our focus getting through these four crises that have simultaneously occurred.

I would say it is, without question, the hardest thing Ive ever done, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a former top executive at Goldman Sachs, said in an interview. Theres no question about it. When I was in the private sector, I was typically the person who went in to clean things up. I was a U.S. ambassador to Germany for things like Wikileaks and the financial crisis of 2008, 2009 and beyond. Those werent easy, but this is at another level.

Putting their agendas on ice

Murphy offers a window into one of the most salient features of state governance in 2020: Hes got more political popularity than ever, but limited flexibility on policy.

The liberal first-term Democrat had spent the first two years feuding with other factions of his party and had an approval rating stuck in the 40s. Support shot up above 70 percent after the coronavirus arrived in the spring, his highest ever, and he has kept a pandemic approval in the high 60s. The governor has inoculated himself politically to the point where even his opponents have struggled to capitalize on real problems in his administrations coronavirus response. A semi-veiled threat of a primary challenge, made a year ago by the most influential power broker in the state, is now laughed off.

But the test of whether Murphy can keep his popularity high will come over the next few months as the state Legislature and governor work on a budget thats due Sept. 30. New Jersey has already agreed to borrow billions of dollars to temporarily close the states budget gap.

Murphy has already asked cabinet members to draw up plans for 15 percent cuts in their departments and school aid which directly affects property taxes and makes up a third of the state budget has faced major cuts. Further cuts to school aid could force teacher layoffs that would anger the New Jersey Education Association, the largest public union in the state and Murphys biggest political ally.

I got elected, in part, to get the economy both growing and getting fair again, but also to fix the bad behavior in the state government, he said. We have made enormous progress on both the stronger, the fairer, the fixing part of it. And a lot of that has to be put on ice. Theres just no question about it.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy. | Pool photo by Chris Pedota/Gannett

Mike DuHaime, a Republican consultant who advised Murphys controversy-pocked predecessor, Chris Christie, acknowledged that the Democrats recent success in bringing infection rates down has given him political capital. Still, he added, Political capital is only worth something if you spend it. Hes going to likely have to spend it on this budget cycle.

Thats arguably a better problem than one faced by Murphys Republican counterpart in Florida. In the first months of the pandemic, Gov. Ron DeSantis lashed out at the media and public health experts who questioned relatively lax shutdown and social distancing policies. That gamble backfired as infections rose and the state is currently one of the nations most afflicted. DeSantiss once-enviable job approval ratings have dipped at least 17 points since last year, now with a majority of voters disliking his performance.

This means hell be confronting a budget crisis without much political leverage in reserve.

In the last fiscal year, the state has missed revenue estimates by $1.9 billion, a drop driven nearly exclusively by coronavirus-related shutdowns.

Pritzker took a different path in Illinois. He issued a stay-home order long before the states outbreak reached the level it had when most other states locked down. He took the lead in explaining data-backed decisions during his daily briefings and was one of the first leaders to personally don a mask in April.

Still, few savvy politicians would take the hand Pritzkers been dealt. Illinois has the worst credit rating in the nation at a moment when it urgently needs to borrow money. He signed a budget with a $6 billion gap between revenue and expenses that was filled with loans for now as the state desperately pleads for federal relief. Pritzker says layoffs are coming without significant help.

Forced to behave more responsibly

If there is one lesson about pandemic politics as they play out in the states, it is that governors should be wary about boasting of their results infection rates and poll ratings are both fluid.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican whose state was among those that seemed to avoid the worst of the coronavirus in the spring only to be crushed by it when it arrived in the sunbelt in June, has gone from 57 percent of voters approving of his pandemic response in early May to just 30 percent in July. Thats less support than the 38 percent in the state who approve of Trumps pandemic handling, making Ducey one of only four governors who has worse marks in emergency management than the president. Ducey, like others facing similar circumstances, can blame in part a speedy reopening strategy, according to a multi-university consortium that is studying state responses to the pandemic. In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom, who got favorable publicity for an aggressive response early, is now getting roughed up as cases rise but has so far held on to a high approval.

As states become a focal point of pandemic policy, governors could again rise to a focal point of national policy. Over 32 years between the elections of 1976 and 2008, the White House was occupied all but four years by someone who arrived at the presidency by way of a governorship.

Since then, however, the presidency has been occupied by two very different leaders who vaulted to power for a similar reason: their ability to translate celebrity personas into electoral results. Although Barack Obama served in the state legislature in Illinois, neither he nor Donald Trump ever proved executive credentials by running a state. Might the current moment put a new premium on these credentials?

On Wednesday, Cuomo will take over from Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan as head of the National Governors Association. (Hogan, a Republican, has been nearly as critical of Trumps pandemic performance as Cuomo.) Cuomo has said hes not running for president or angling for a federal position.

But he has seen both his New York and national profile rise.

In February, slogging through a third term, he had had a favorability rating of 44 percent. By the end of March, as he clawed his way through the pandemic engulfing the state, his favorability had jumped to 71 percent, its highest level in seven years, boosted by nods from legions of voters even Republicans who had soured on the third-term Democrat long ago. A staggering 87 percent of all voters approved of his handling of the pandemic.

Even if Cuomo is sincere about not intending to run, hes young enough by todays standards to eye the next cycle, and it seems virtually certain that others including Newsom, Hogan and DeSantis (if his fortunes improve) will be vying for the national stage, and hoping to trumpet reputations as people who solve problems rather than argue about them.

Governors are almost forced to behave more responsibly, said William Galston, who runs the Brookings Institutions Governance Studies Program in Washington. Its much harder for governors. Even if their states are deep red or deep blue, governors have to be doers, not just talkers. Theyre held responsible for results in a very direct way.

That is true even when those results are only partly within a governors control. Rarely has the partnership between Washington and 50 state counterparts been more consequential.

In a sense, it's the federal government's responsibility to deal with a big shock to the system like this, but the average citizen isn't going to know, said David Lazer, a political scientist and computer scientist at Northeastern University, who is involved with the multi-university consortium studying the states. There is this narrative, which Cuomo has in some ways has encouraged, which is, the buck stops with me. Sometimes the buck doesn't really stop with him and he'll still get the blame or the credit.

This article is part of The Fifty, a new POLITICO series that looks at how state and local leaders are responding to current national challenges, from the pandemic to the economic crisis to the reckoning with race. More coverage of these issues here.

Reporting was contributed by John Harris, Matt Friedman, Matt Dixon and Jeremy B. White.

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The best job in America or a living nightmare? - Politico

Microsoft Joins Tech Giants in Forming the Open Source Security Foundation – WinBuzzer

Microsoft is part of a group of tech industry heavyweights who have formed a new foundation focused on open source. Specifically, the Open Source Security Foundation wants to increase security around open source services.

Joining Microsoft in the Open Source Security Foundation (OSSF) are Red Hat, Google, JPMC, IBM, NCC Group, and OWASP Foundation. Microsofts own GitHub is also a part of the group. Announced Monday, the collective of tech companies are also joined by the JPMorgan Chase banking firm.

All of the foundation is hosted at the Linux Foundation. In the announcement, the group said the intention is connect and secure software by leveraging the Linux Foundation. For example, the Core Infrastructure Initiative (CII) and the GitHub-initiated Open Source Security Coalition (OSSC), are part of the initiative.

In a confirmation post, Microsofts chief technology officer Mark Russinovich says the foundation will improve the security of open source software by building a broader community, targeted initiatives and best practices.

Given the complexity and communal nature of open source software, building better security must also be a community-driven process.

For a list of current project being looked at by the Open Source Security Foundation, head to the official GitHub page.

Russinovich explains securing open source software can benefit every company in the foundation, as well as users:

Open source software is core to nearly every companys technology strategy and securing it is an essential part of securing the supply chain for every company, including our own. With the ubiquity of open source software, attackers are currently exploiting vulnerabilities across a wide range of critical services and infrastructure, including utilities, medical equipment, transportation, government systems, traditional software, cloud services, hardware and IoT.

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Microsoft Joins Tech Giants in Forming the Open Source Security Foundation - WinBuzzer

VERIFY: Is the Port Neches-Groves ISD parent code of conduct new this year? – 12newsnow.com KBMT-KJAC

PORT NECHES, Texas A screenshot showing a code of conduct policy for Port Neches-Groves ISD parents is getting a lot of attention online.

12News Investigates looked into the origins of the policy.

Is the PNGISD parent code of conduct a new policy?

Our source is PNG ISD assistant superintendent Julie Gauthier.

She says the policy has been in place since 2018, and sent 12News a copy of the code of conduct dated 2018.

It's the same parent code of conduct parents are being asked to sign this year.

Do other school districts have a parent code of conduct?

Beaumont ISD's parent code of conduct is very similar, and can be found on the district's website. Hamshire Fannett also has a code of conduct.

While it's hard to say exactly how many schools have adopted a parent code of conduct, 12News can verify that several Southeast Texas schools do implement them.Will this infringe on parent's first amendment rights if they choose to post something negative about the school on social media?

Gauthier says the policy isn't meant to take away anyone's freedom. Instead, it's a proactive approach the school district has adopted to make sure the district and parents are working in the best interest of the child.

Also on 12NewsNow.com

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VERIFY: Is the Port Neches-Groves ISD parent code of conduct new this year? - 12newsnow.com KBMT-KJAC

AI is learning when it should and shouldnt defer to a human – MIT Technology Review

The context: Studies show that when people and AI systems work together, they can outperform either one acting alone. Medical diagnostic systems are often checked over by human doctors, and content moderation systems filter what they can before requiring human assistance. But algorithms are rarely designed to optimize for this AI-to-human handover. If they were, the AI system would only defer to its human counterpart if the person could actually make a better decision.

The research: Researchers at MITs Computer Science and AI Laboratory (CSAIL) have now developed an AI system to do this kind of optimization based on strengths and weaknesses of the human collaborator. It uses two separate machine-learning models; one makes the actual decision, whether thats diagnosing a patient or removing a social media post, and one predicts whether the AI or human is the better decision maker.

The latter model, which the researchers call the rejector, iteratively improves its predictions based on each decision makers track record over time. It can also take into account factors beyond performance, including a persons time constraints or a doctors access to sensitive patient information not available to the AI system.

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AI is learning when it should and shouldnt defer to a human - MIT Technology Review

Job interviews: Recruiters are using artificial intelligence to analyse what you say to find the right hire – TechRepublic

Harqen's AI platform analyses language to determine a candidate's suitability for a role, potentially making it less prone to bias than video-based recruitment technology.

Artificial-intelligence-based hiring tools are already transforming the recruitment process by allowing businesses to vastly speed up the time it takes to identify top talent. With algorithms able to scour applications databases in the fraction of a time it would take a human hiring manager, AI-assisted hiring has the potential not only to give precious time back to businesses, but also draw in candidates from wider and more diverse talent pools.

AI-assisted hiring is also posited as a potential solution for reducing human bias whether subconscious or otherwise in the hiring process.

SEE: Robotic process automation: A cheat sheet (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

US company Harqen has been offering hiring technologies to some of the world's biggest companies for years, partnering with the likes of Walmart, FedEx and American Airlines to streamline and improve their hiring processes. Originating as an on-demand interviewing provider, the company has now expanded into AI with a new platform that it says offers a more dependable and bias-free means of matching employers with employees.

The solution, simply called the Harqen Machine Learning Platform, analyses candidate's answers to interview questions and assesses the type of words and language used in their responses. According to Harqen, this allows it to put together a profile of psychological traits that can be used to help determine a candidate's suitability for a role.

Combined with a resume analysis, which provides a more straightforward determiner of whether a candidate's professional and educational background fits with the requirements of the job, Harqen says its machine-learning platform is capable of making the same hiring decision as human recruiters 95% of the time. In one campaign that assessed approximately 3,500 job applications with "a very large US diagnostic firm" in early 2020, Harqen's machine-learning platform successfully predicted 2,193 of the candidate applications that were accepted, and 1,292 that were declined.

Key to Harqen's offering is what the company's chief technology officer Mark Unak describes as the platform's linguistic analysis, which can identify word clusters that are specific to certain job types but also offers a personality analysis based on the so-called "big five" traits, also known as the OCEAN model (openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism), which can help hiring managers determine a candidate's enthusiasm for the position.

"We have a dictionary of terms where most positive words are ranked as a +5 and most negative words are ranked as a -5, so we can determine how enthusiastic you are in the answers that you're giving," Unak tells TechRepublic.

"We can also use a linguistic analysis to analyse the grammar," he adds, noting that about 60% of our vocabulary consists of just 80 words. Those are the pronouns, the propositions, the articles and the intransigent verbs. "The remaining 10,000 words in the English language fill in that 40%. By the analysis of how you use that, we can get a psychological trait analysis."

Harqen's machine-learning tool analyses word clusters to help determine candidates' personality traits, such as enthusiasm.

Source: Harqen.ai

According to Unak, using a machine-learning system that determines a candidate's suitability based on linguistic analysis is a more accurate and impartial method than those that rely on facial-scanning or vocal-inflection algorithms. Such machine-learning techniques within hiring are on the rise and are increasingly being adopted by major companies around the world.

"That's kind of problematic," says Unak. "Not everybody expresses emotions in the same way, with the same facial expressions, and not everybody expresses the same emotion that's expected. Different cultures and different races might have different problems in expressing those facial expressions and having the computer recognise them."

SEE:Diversity and Inclusion policy (TechRepublic Premium)

By only analysing the linguistic content that has been transcribed from recorded interviews, Harqen's algorithm never factors in appearance, facial expressions, or other self-reported personality traits that could be unreliable. Unak says the company will also retrain its models on a regular basis as new data comes in, which will help ensure that algorithms don't get stuck in their old ways if candidates begin giving new answers to questions that are equally relevant.

"If our customer evolves and they start to hire people who are either more diverse, or come up with different answers to the questions that are just as relevant, our models will pick that up," Unak adds.

Diversity whether based on gender, race, age or otherwise has been show to play a significant role in the success or failure of workplace productivity and collaboration. Whether AI-based hiring tools can help here remains to be seen, and ultimately depends on whether they can be implemented in a fair and impartial way.

Beyond diversity, Harqen is exploring how its machine-learning tool could help businesses get the best return on investment form their hiring choices. The magic word here is delayed gratification: the ability to accurately identify employees who can resist the temptation for immediate rewards and instead persevere for an even greater payoff in the future.

"It's grit, it's persistence, it's the ability to imagine a future and it's the ability to develop and execute a plan to get there," says Unak. "Isn't that what hope and delayed gratification mean? I hope for a better future, I can imagine it, my hope is realistic and that there's a plan or a way to get there, and I'm going to work towards it."

Learn the latest news and best practices about data science, big data analytics, and artificial intelligence. Delivered Mondays

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Job interviews: Recruiters are using artificial intelligence to analyse what you say to find the right hire - TechRepublic

Blue Canyon Technologies Selected by Loft Orbital to Provide Spacecraft Bus for Honeywell and the Canadian Space Agency Program – Business Wire

BOULDER, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Small satellite manufacturer and mission services provider Blue Canyon Technologies (BCT) has been selected by Loft Orbital to develop and build the YAM-4 spacecraft bus for the Quantum Encryption and Science Satellite (QEYSSat) mission.

The QEYSSat mission is being led by the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) and Honeywell. The CSA awarded Honeywell a $30 million dollar contract for the design and implementation phases of the mission. The mission will demonstrate the use of advanced encryption technology, also known as quantum key distribution (QKD), in space for secure online communications on Earth. According to CSA, this QKD technology will create encryption codes that are virtually unbreakable, allowing for more secure communications in the age of quantum computing.

Having a secure communication infrastructure is critical in this day and age, says George Stafford, President and CEO of Blue Canyon Technologies. Our foundational support of the YAM-4 spacecraft will make the access to space for this type of demonstration less expensive and quicker to launch, allowing Canadian scientists to study how QKD behaves in space.

The satellite will be designed using BCTs newest X-SAT line of spacecraft, specifically the X-SAT Venus-Class which can carry payloads up to 90 kg. As with other BCT X-SAT buses, the X-SAT Venus-Class is a high-agility platform, enabling the onboard instrument to collect data and revisit sites frequently. The X-SAT Venus-Classs compact profile is designed to maximize the volume, mass and power available for the CSA mission.

BCT is a best-in-class bus provider and we are confident in their ability to deliver a spacecraft that meets the unique performance requirements of this mission, said John Eterno, VP Missions at Loft Orbital.

The benefits of QEYSSat will be substantial. Because encryption keys cannot be compromised, they are virtually impossible to crack, and integration this technology into Canadian communications networks would guarantee the privacy of public, private and commercial data. While ground-based QKD devices are available for use today, their capabilities are limited: current systems rely on cables to transmit quantum particles on land, but the signals can become unreliable over long distances. To provide the capacity across long distances, even globally, the network must be able to use satellites in lieu of cables.

Blue Canyons diverse spacecraft platform has the proven capability to enable a broad range of missions and technological advances for the New Space economy, further reducing the barriers of space entry.BCT is currently building more than 60 spacecraft for government, commercial and academic missions. The company has doubled in size over the past 12 months and recently opened its new 80,000-square-foot headquarters and satellite constellation production facility in Jun

About BCT

Blue Canyon Technologies, Inc., (BCT) a Colorado-based private company founded in 2008 to bring innovative, reliable and affordable solutions to space missions, is an experienced integrator of aerospace systems and developer of advanced aerospace products and technologies. BCT is a vertically integrated spacecraft manufacturer supporting nearly 40 unique missions with over 70 spacecraft. The company currently has more than 60 satellites in production and is developing a new 80,000-square-foot facility for high rate production.

BCT has supported missions for the U.S. Air Force, NASA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and many others and provided the Attitude Control Systems for the first interplanetary CubeSats which successfully traveled to Mars. The company has been recognized with awards including Inc Magazines 5000 Fastest Growing Private Companies, 2017 Colorado Companies to Watch, and the 2019 Colorado Biz Made in Colorado Emerging Manufacturer Winner.

For the latest news on Blue Canyon Technologies and for other company information, please visit http://www.bluecanyontech.com. You can follow the company on Instagram here or Twitter here.

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Blue Canyon Technologies Selected by Loft Orbital to Provide Spacecraft Bus for Honeywell and the Canadian Space Agency Program - Business Wire

GovCon Expert Bill Downer: Securing the Supply Chain; Securing the Data – GovConWire

Bill Downer GovConExpert

Bill Downer, vice president of national programsfor Seagate Government Solutions, has released his second article as a member of Executive Mosaics GovCon Expert program on Monday after exploring the impact or lack of impact CMMC will have on supply chains and data hygiene.

In his second article, Downer discussed the federal governments use of data and the simple steps that federal agencies could take to secure our nations data outside of CMMC.You can read GovCon Expert Bill Downers piece below:

Securing the Supply Chain; Securing the Data

In my first article for the GovCon Expert program, which you can read right here, I talked about how Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) was focusing on the development of weapon systems and adhering to the methods needed to protect the data about those systems as opposed to securing our supply chains.

For this article, I wanted to discuss some very simple steps that the U.S. federal government can take to secure data beyond CMMC.

It is well documented that most personal data that has been stolen from our government systems (think Office of Personnel Management) was stolen because the federal government has many requirements for data encryption. As a result, the data was either not encrypted at all or encrypted improperly.

Unfortunately, these requirements are often waived or ignored. In many cases and systems, the government and its contractors do an exceptional job of protecting our data while in transit. However, they become much more relaxed about the level and discipline to protect data at rest.

The unfortunate aspect of this approach is that the data at rest becomes the largest attack surface. With the current pandemic, this situation has become much worse. With so many government employees and contractors working from home or other remote locations through laptops and tablets, the data on these devices is always at risk.

I happen to occupy an interesting seat during these times because I work for the largest storage device manufacturer in the world. From my seat, I know at a macro level who is buying what type of devices with what level of encryption.

The Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) 140-2 standard is aninformation technologysecurity approval program for cryptographic modules produced by private sector vendors who seek to have their products certified for use in government departments and regulated industries (such as financial and health-care institutions) that collect, store, transfer, share and disseminatesensitive but unclassified(SBU) information.

Tamper evident FIPS 140-2 security labels are utilized to deter and detect tampering of modules.

FIPS 140-2 establishes theCryptographic Module Validation Program(CMVP) as a joint effort by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and theCommunications Security Establishment(CSE) for theGovernment of Canada

Security programs overseen by NIST and CSE focus on working with governments and industry to establish more secure systems and networks. They do that by developing, managing and promoting security assessment tools, techniques, services and supporting programs for testing, evaluation and validation.

They also address other areas like: the development and maintenance of security metrics, security evaluation criteria and evaluation methodologies, tests and test methods; security-specific criteria for laboratory accreditation; guidance on the use of evaluated and tested products; research to address assurance methods and system-wide security and assessment methodologies; security protocol validation activities; and appropriate coordination with assessment-related activities of voluntary industry standards bodies and other assessment regimes.

Unfortunately, the government is not a leader in buying FIPS 140-2 encrypted drives for their systems. That requirement is often waived or not required for federal information technology systems. Since it is not required and IT systems often fall under the category of lowest price technically acceptable, the bidders do not offer FIPS 140-2 storage devices.

If they do offer storage devices as a part of the proposal; there is no value attached to these secure devices. One possible suggestion is for the government to require FIPS 140-2 devices in all their systems and that these devices must always be in FIPS mode. It is a NIST standard that should be used and enforced.

About GovCon Expert

Through Executive Mosaics GovCon Expert program, you can access the words of caution and celebration from the elite minds behind the innovation and implementation of emerging technologies across federal agencies and industry, including artificial intelligence, national security, cybersecurity, 5G, cloud, big data as well as competitive intelligence, open source solutions and other aspects of the GovCon industry.

Dont hesitate to contact us, if you want to become a GovCon Expert and share your voice across our unmatched publications and other social media products that have a weekly circulation of over 1,000,000 direct emails as well as matching inbound traffic.

We look forward to hearing from our next GovCon Expert soon. Click here to become a GovCon Expert.

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GovCon Expert Bill Downer: Securing the Supply Chain; Securing the Data - GovConWire

Network Encryption Market : Segmented by Application and Geography Trends, Growth and Forecasts To 2027 | Cisco, Thales eSecurity, Gemalto, Juniper…

Environment, Health, and Safety (EHS) Market Report Forecast to 2027

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Network Encryption Market : Segmented by Application and Geography Trends, Growth and Forecasts To 2027 | Cisco, Thales eSecurity, Gemalto, Juniper...

Governors find their moment and peril – POLITICO – POLITICO

It is this intersection between the national capital and 50 state capitals that will be a principal theme for POLITICOs The Fifty, a new series that examines the ways in which governors, mayors and other political figures are shaping the nations future. The pandemic, more than any crisis in recent memory, has an intimate edge. It affects not just some citizens, but virtually every citizen, in an immediate and tangible way at work and home. As state and local governments are much closer to the stuff of daily life and have more direct responsibility for public health so too will they be the more relevant and vibrant arenas for creating post-pandemic America.

In interviews in recent days, several governors told POLITICO they have found their new circumstances and the re-ordering of their own personal and political priorities to be all-consuming.

Its tremendously frustrating in terms of my time and my focus, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker said in an interview. I didnt run for governor thinking I was going to spend every day now for six months focused on the most basic thing of all, which is keeping people alive.

A global pandemic was not on the radar when I ran for governor, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer told POLITICO. For Whitmer, the coronavirus, the recession that ensued, the national trauma over racial disparities after the George Floyd killing, and devastating floods in her state have in some way melded into a singular, extreme moment: In ordinary times, one of these crises would consume all your energy. And yet, right now, we have to be able to manage all of these crises and do the day-to-day work of state government. We have an ambitious agenda that we still plan to pursue, but certainly this has taken all of our focus getting through these four crises that have simultaneously occurred.

I would say it is, without question, the hardest thing Ive ever done, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a former top executive at Goldman Sachs, said in an interview. Theres no question about it. When I was in the private sector, I was typically the person who went in to clean things up. I was a U.S. ambassador to Germany for things like Wikileaks and the financial crisis of 2008, 2009 and beyond. Those werent easy, but this is at another level.

Murphy offers a window into one of the most salient features of state governance in 2020: Hes got more political popularity than ever, but limited flexibility on policy.

The liberal first-term Democrat had spent the first two years feuding with other factions of his party and had an approval rating stuck in the 40s. Support shot up above 70 percent after the coronavirus arrived in the spring, his highest ever, and he has kept a pandemic approval in the high 60s. The governor has inoculated himself politically to the point where even his opponents have struggled to capitalize on real problems in his administrations coronavirus response. A semi-veiled threat of a primary challenge, made a year ago by the most influential power broker in the state, is now laughed off.

But the test of whether Murphy can keep his popularity high will come over the next few months as the state Legislature and governor work on a budget thats due Sept. 30. New Jersey has already agreed to borrow billions of dollars to temporarily close the states budget gap.

Murphy has already asked cabinet members to draw up plans for 15 percent cuts in their departments and school aid which directly affects property taxes and makes up a third of the state budget has faced major cuts. Further cuts to school aid could force teacher layoffs that would anger the New Jersey Education Association, the largest public union in the state and Murphys biggest political ally.

I got elected, in part, to get the economy both growing and getting fair again, but also to fix the bad behavior in the state government, he said. We have made enormous progress on both the stronger, the fairer, the fixing part of it. And a lot of that has to be put on ice. Theres just no question about it.

Mike DuHaime, a Republican consultant who advised Murphys controversy-pocked predecessor, Chris Christie, acknowledged that the Democrats recent success in bringing infection rates down has given him political capital. Still, he added, Political capital is only worth something if you spend it. Hes going to likely have to spend it on this budget cycle.

Thats arguably a better problem than one faced by Murphys Republican counterpart in Florida. In the first months of the pandemic, Gov. Ron DeSantis lashed out at the media and public health experts who questioned relatively lax shutdown and social distancing policies. That gamble backfired as infections rose and the state is currently one of the nations most afflicted. DeSantiss once-enviable job approval ratings have dipped at least 17 points since last year, now with a majority of voters disliking his performance.

This means hell be confronting a budget crisis without much political leverage in reserve.

In the last fiscal year, the state has missed revenue estimates by $1.9 billion, a drop driven nearly exclusively by coronavirus-related shutdowns.

Pritzker took a different path in Illinois. He issued a stay-home order long before the states outbreak reached the level it had when most other states locked down. He took the lead in explaining data-backed decisions during his daily briefings and was one of the first leaders to personally don a mask in April.

Still, few savvy politicians would take the hand Pritzkers been dealt. Illinois has the worst credit rating in the nation at a moment when it urgently needs to borrow money. He signed a budget with a $6 billion gap between revenue and expenses that was filled with loans for now as the state desperately pleads for federal relief. Pritzker says layoffs are coming without significant help.

If there is one lesson about pandemic politics as they play out in the states, it is that governors should be wary about boasting of their results infection rates and poll ratings are both fluid.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican whose state was among those that seemed to avoid the worst of the coronavirus in the spring only to be crushed by it when it arrived in the sunbelt in June, has gone from 57 percent of voters approving of his pandemic response in early May to just 30 percent in July. Thats less support than the 38 percent in the state who approve of Trumps pandemic handling, making Ducey one of only four governors who has worse marks in emergency management than the president. Ducey, like others facing similar circumstances, can blame in part a speedy reopening strategy, according to a multi-university consortium that is studying state responses to the pandemic. In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom, who got favorable publicity for an aggressive response early, is now getting roughed up as cases rise but has so far held on to a high approval.

As states become a focal point of pandemic policy, governors could again rise to a focal point of national policy. Over 32 years between the elections of 1976 and 2008, the White House was occupied all but four years by someone who arrived at the presidency by way of a governorship.

Since then, however, the presidency has been occupied by two very different leaders who vaulted to power for a similar reason: their ability to translate celebrity personas into electoral results. Although Barack Obama served in the state legislature in Illinois, neither he nor Donald Trump ever proved executive credentials by running a state. Might the current moment put a new premium on these credentials?

On Wednesday, Cuomo will take over from Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan as head of the National Governors Association. (Hogan, a Republican, has been nearly as critical of Trumps pandemic performance as Cuomo.) Cuomo has said hes not running for president or angling for a federal position.

But he has seen both his New York and national profile rise.

In February, slogging through a third term, he had had a favorability rating of 44 percent. By the end of March, as he clawed his way through the pandemic engulfing the state, his favorability had jumped to 71 percent, its highest level in seven years, boosted by nods from legions of voters even Republicans who had soured on the third-term Democrat long ago. A staggering 87 percent of all voters approved of his handling of the pandemic.

Even if Cuomo is sincere about not intending to run, hes young enough by todays standards to eye the next cycle, and it seems virtually certain that others including Newsom, Hogan and DeSantis (if his fortunes improve) will be vying for the national stage, and hoping to trumpet reputations as people who solve problems rather than argue about them.

Governors are almost forced to behave more responsibly, said William Galston, who runs the Brookings Institutions Governance Studies Program in Washington. Its much harder for governors. Even if their states are deep red or deep blue, governors have to be doers, not just talkers. Theyre held responsible for results in a very direct way.

That is true even when those results are only partly within a governors control. Rarely has the partnership between Washington and 50 state counterparts been more consequential.

In a sense, it's the federal government's responsibility to deal with a big shock to the system like this, but the average citizen isn't going to know, said David Lazer, a political scientist and computer scientist at Northeastern University, who is involved with the multi-university consortium studying the states. There is this narrative, which Cuomo has in some ways has encouraged, which is, the buck stops with me. Sometimes the buck doesn't really stop with him and he'll still get the blame or the credit.

This article is part of The Fifty, a new POLITICO series that looks at how state and local leaders are responding to current national challenges, from the pandemic to the economic crisis to the reckoning with race. More coverage of these issues here.

John Harris, Matt Friedman, Matt Dixon and Jeremy B. White contributed to this report.

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Governors find their moment and peril - POLITICO - POLITICO

Robinhood Influencer Wants the Winklevoss Twins to Explain Bitcoin to Him – Cointelegraph

Popular Twitter personality Dave Portnoy, famous for his motto stocks only go up, now wants to learn about Bitcoin (BTC) from Gemini co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss.

In a Twitter clip extracted from his latest daily show on August 4, Portnoy tells the Winklevoss twins hed like them to explain Bitcoin in a way that I would understand, he said.

Portnoy stressed that he wants them to come in their little rowing outfits, in a reference to the movie The Social Network, where they were shown competing in Harvards rowing team.

Both Tyler and Cameron accepted the invite shortly after.

Portnoy recounted how he once bought BTC in that original Bitcoin age but lost all access to it. Ive spent 20 grand, its just sitting in the ether, he lamented in what appeared to be an accidental pun.

He said that he does not know how to buy Bitcoin or how to maintain self custody of the asset once acquired, which is why he wants the Winklevoss twins to come and explain it to him. He also revealed in passing that he had already talked to them about this, but they wanted a free ad. Portnoy on the other hand wants to get rich by learning about it.

A viewer appears to have suggested he buys Chainlink (LINK) as well, though he immediately replied I dont know how, Ive already explained.

Portnoy is the founder of Barstool Sports, a sports news website. Since the coronavirus lockdowns, he has immersed himself in the world of daily stock trading, reportedly to make up for the closure of sports betting.

He makes daily videos about his fortunes and misfortunes in the stock market, famously saying phrases like stocks only go up or I have as much experience as Joe Dick Tom Warren Buffet.

He reportedly inspired his followers to enter the stock market through retail platforms like Robinhood, though he is known for using E*Trade.

Portnoy and the Davey Day Trader persona are considered the poster child of irrational exuberance that led to events like Hertzs post-bankruptcy rally or Dogecoins TikTok-fueled Rally.

The sudden interest in Bitcoin could be due to plunging profits in the stock market, as the latest rally is primarily led by a few very large stocks like Apple, Facebook and Microsoft. Earlier in the Tuesday show, he complained of a $40,000 loss on Shopify.

While the latest events could result in publicity for Bitcoin among stock traders who follow Portnoy, the interest is unlikely to last longer than the current rally.

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Robinhood Influencer Wants the Winklevoss Twins to Explain Bitcoin to Him - Cointelegraph