News you may have missed #302 (NSA edition)
March 5, 2010 Leave a comment
- Former NSA tech chief doesn’t trust cloud computing. Brian Snow, the former US National Security Agency technical director, told a conference that he doesn’t trust cloud services and bluntly admonished vendors for leaving software vulnerabilities unpatched, sometimes for years.
- Former key NSA official relocates to Silicon Valley. Prescott Winter, formerly chief information officer and chief technology officer at the US National Security Agency, has joined ArcSight Inc., a Silicon Valley developer of security and compliance management tools for government and private industry. Revolving doors galore!
- NSA cybersecurity role worries civil liberties groups. The Obama administration’s plan to bolster US cyber security calls for greater cooperation between private companies and the National Security Agency. But civil liberties advocates are sounding alarms about the NSA’s role, because of the secretive nature of the agency and its role in the Bush administration’s warrantless wiretapping program.







Analysis: Cloud computing causes ‘cosmic shift’ in US spy community
November 28, 2011 by Joseph Fitsanakis Leave a comment
Cloud computing
By JOSEPH FITSANAKIS | intelNews.org |
While many are focusing on recent reports of arrests of CIA operatives in Lebanon and Iran, American intelligence planners have other things on their minds: the latest buzzword is ‘cloud’; specifically, ‘cloud computing’. The term means storing information and software on a network, which can then be shared on demand by users of interconnected electronic devices. The US intelligence community’s interest in this form of data organizing has been known for quite some time. But according to specialist publication Federal Computer Week, cloud computing is rapidly becoming a reality, as one after the other, US intelligence agencies are “moving their classified, sensitive information off their own servers and into the cloud”. Such a change “might have sounded crazy five years ago”, says FCW, and the fact that it is happening marks nothing less than a “cosmic shift” for American intelligence. The migration unto the cloud was spearheaded two years ago by the National Security Agency; the NSA was later joined by the Defense Intelligence Agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the super-secretive National Reconnaissance Office. Soon the CIA wanted in: in 2009, Jill Tummler Singer, the CIA’s deputy Chief Intelligence Officer, told ComputerWorld that the CIA was becoming one of the US government’s strongest advocates for cloud computing, even though “the term really didn’t hit our vocabulary until a year ago”. Not everyone is super-excited about the cloud. Last year, Brian Snow, the NSA’s former Technical Director, said at a conference that he didn’t trust cloud services, mostly because of the existence of countless unpatched software vulnerabilities. But the move is heavily supported by two of America’s most senior intelligence officials: Keith Alexander, commander of US Cyber Command and director of NSA —America’s largest intelligence agency— and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. Read more of this post
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with Analysis, Brian Snow, CIA, CIA Information Assurance Group, cloud computing, cybersecurity, James R. Clapper, Keith Alexander, NRO, NSA, Robert Bigman, United States, US National Geospatial Intelligence Agency