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Government Technology/News
DARPA Announces Dev’t of Autonomous Pilot Combat System
by Matthew Nelson
Published on May 9, 2019
DARPA Announces Dev’t of Autonomous Pilot Combat System


Jeff Brody

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency plans to develop an autonomous platform to boost pilot capabilities using of human-machine collaboration. DARPA said Wednesday that it intends to develop an artificial intelligence tool in aerial combat principles via human training methods as part of the Air Combat Evolution initiative.

Some of the topics the agency look to add in the training plan include one-on-one combat scenarios and basic fighter maneuvers. DARPA intends to solicit proposals from companies and schools in the integration of tactical algorithms for the system. Afterward, AFWERX will test all submitted algorithms in a tournament-style competition.

The agency will also seek proposals in line with every phase of the project’s development. 

News
NASA Completes Another Space Launch System Test
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on May 9, 2019
NASA Completes Another Space Launch System Test


Jeff Brody

NASA conducted another test of its Space Launch System vehicle configuration at the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., where the agency assessed the space vehicle’s aerodynamics through a set of wind tunnel tests, NASASpaceFlight.com reported Tuesday. 

The space agency launched 700 supersonic test runs using the SLS Block 1 Cargo vehicle at a speed of Mach 1.5 to 4.5. NASA aims to use aerodynamic data from the test to enhance analysis and modeling of the vehicle’s atmospheric trajectories, guidance, navigation, control and structural loading. 

The test included rolling out to the launch pad, liftoff, boost phase, booster separation and return to the launch area.  NASA started testing components of SLS at different wind tunnels across the U.S in 2018. 

News
Coast Guard to Field Insitu UAVs Aboard Nat’l Security Cutters
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on May 9, 2019
Coast Guard to Field Insitu UAVs Aboard Nat’l Security Cutters


Jeff Brody

The U.S. Coast Guard plans to deploy small drones developed by Boeing’s Insitu subsidiary onto four more National Security Cutters by the end of 2019, Flight Global reported Wednesday. The Scan Eagle unmanned aerial vehicles will contain payloads including sensor systems, communications relay platforms and a laser pointer to support various USCG missions including search-and-rescue, ice-breaking and anti-drug trafficking. 

Insitu staff will operate three UAVs for up to 200 hours every month as part of a contract with the service branch to support the deployment. The Coast Guard intends to field the Scan Eagles along with the NSC fleet once all of the ships have been built.

News
SPAWAR Highlights Need for Digital Navy at Sea-Air-Space 2019
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on May 9, 2019
SPAWAR Highlights Need for Digital Navy at Sea-Air-Space 2019


Jeff Brody

The Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command led 10 other commands in promoting the advantages of building a digital Navy during the 2019 Sea-Air-Space Exposition at the Gaylord National Convention Center in National Harbor, Md. 

“We are facing a culture shift where data is a vital strategic resource in warfare. Networks, communication and data storage with the tools to access and maximize use of the data are all key to our overall mission effectiveness across the Navy from personnel management to logistics to kinetic operations,” SPAWAR Commander Rear Adm. Christian Becker said in a statement Wednesday. He added that the Navy needs accurate information sharing across all warfare domains and platforms to better operate in a data-driven environment.

The Navy Information Warfare Community hosted speaker series, industry engagement and twelve technology demonstrations at the Sea-Air-Space conference. Service officials coordinated the government, military, industry and academia to accelerate the delivery of new capabilities to the warfighter. 

News
GSA Eyes FedRAMP Training Program for Federal Security Officials
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 9, 2019
GSA Eyes FedRAMP Training Program for Federal Security Officials


Jeff Brody

General Services Administration officials said they plan to provide federal security officers hands-on training on the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, FedScoop reported Wednesday. 

“We’re going to start bringing security officers into our office, give them some training on FedRAMP, radicalize them to our methodologies,” Zach Baldwin, program manager at FedRAMP, said Tuesday at the Cloud Security Alliance’s federal summit. 

Baldwin noted the training program would be a grassroots initiative allowing the selected officers to work through an authority-to-operate project to “get the FedRAMP way out there.” FedRAMP provides cloud service vendors and third-party assessment organizations online training opportunities to better understand the cloud security compliance program, according to the report.

News
CBO Predicts Pentagon May Spend More on Space Force Than Reported
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on May 9, 2019
CBO Predicts Pentagon May Spend More on Space Force Than Reported


Jeff Brody

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the federal government may spend up to $3 billion in taxpayer money and add $1.3 billion to the Pentagon’s annual budget to establish and run President Trump’s proposed Space Force. The figure comes from CBO’s newly-released analysis of the personnel requirements and costs of proposed military space organizations. 

Defense officials have said the Space Force would cost nearly $2 billion over the next five years and require $500 million annually to operate. Todd Harrison, a budget expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said CBO provided higher estimates due to “bad information” from the Air Force, Defense One reported Wednesday. 

“CBO arrived at the higher number of new personnel [needed for the Space Force] in part because it assumed that no [Air Force] base operations, command, logistics, and medical personnel currently support space forces and therefore would not transfer to the new service,” he said in a tweet.

Aside from the Space Force, the Pentagon plans to establish the U.S. Space Command and the Space Development Agency to focus on satellite acquisitions. CBO estimates the new command would cost between $520 million and $1 billion, while the satellite buying agency would require between $220 million and $560 million.

News
NASCIO Members, Federal Agencies Discuss Cyber Issues at 2019 DC Fly-In
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on May 9, 2019
NASCIO Members, Federal Agencies Discuss Cyber Issues at 2019 DC Fly-In


Jeff Brody

Members of the National Association of State Chief Information Officers met with key federal agencies as well as Federal CIO and 2019 Wash100 Award recipient Suzette Kent during the organization’s D.C. Fly-In in event Washington, D.C., NASCIO said on Wednesday.

NASCIO members engaged with officials from the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services unit, General Services Administration, Internal Revenue Service Office of Safeguards and First Responder Network Authority to discuss issues such as the standardization of federal cybersecurity policy. The event also saw discussions on more collaborations between state and federal governments as well as other updates and concerns from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and GSA.

NASCIO holds the D.C. Fly-in annually to provide an avenue for discussing government priorities relevant to the state CIO’s responsibilities including cybersecurity regulations, information sharing and emerging technology.

News
Lawmakers Reintroduce Federal AI Legislation
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on May 9, 2019
Lawmakers Reintroduce Federal AI Legislation


Jeff Brody

A bipartisan group of lawmakers reintroduced the Artificial Intelligence in Government Act to provide technical expertise throughout agencies and develop federal AI policy. The office of Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, said in a statement released Wednesday that Portman as well as Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, Cory Gardner, R-Colo. and Kamala Harris, D-Calif., seek to improve federal agencies’ implementation of AI to provide better benefits to the general public. 

The 2019 AI in Government Act will mandate agencies to create governance plans to optimize AI technology for public use, create an AI advisory board for potential policy concerns and direct the Office of Personnel Management to identify potential AI-related government positions. The legislation will also establish a Center of Excellence under the General Services Administration for technical workforce matters, AI policy research and industry partnership opportunities. 

“This bipartisan legislation will help ensure our government understands the benefits and pitfalls of this technology as it engages in a responsible, accountable rollout of AI,” Portman noted. 

The legislation has received endorsements from various non-government organizations as well as Microsoft and Facebook.

News
Patrick Shanahan: Cyber Talent Retention a Top Challenge at DoD
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 9, 2019
Patrick Shanahan: Cyber Talent Retention a Top Challenge at DoD


Jeff Brody

Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said the Pentagon considers retention of cyber professionals a top challenge, FCW reported Wednesday.

“Our biggest challenge with the red teams is keeping the people. We get out-recruited,” he said Wednesday before the Senate Appropriations Committee’s defense subpanel.

Shanahan, a 2019 Wash100 winner, noted during the hearing that he wants to boost investments in cyber scholarship programs, red team capabilities and training ranges and that an increase in Cyber Command’s fiscal 2020 budget would fund offensive cyber operations for deterrence effort. According to the report, the Department of Defense allocated nearly $10 billion for offensive operations, cybersecurity and network defense initiatives. 

News
White House Stands New Committee to Coordinate US Research Community
by Darwin McDaniel
Published on May 8, 2019
White House Stands New Committee to Coordinate US Research Community


White House Stands New Committee to Coordinate US Research Community

The White House formed a new joint committee to lead the federal government’s efforts to address the challenges facing the U.S. research community and accelerate innovation, Nextgov reported Tuesday. The Office of Science and Technology Policy said that the committee will coordinate government agencies, academia and the private sector to improve the “safety, integrity and productivity” of research projects. 

“Our nation’s continued global leadership in science and technology depends upon attracting, empowering and retaining our best and brightest talent,” said Kelvin Droegemeier, director of OSTP. “It’s critical we remove any obstacles in the way of the scientists, engineers, and inventors of today and tomorrow, achieving their full potential.” 

The National Science and Technology Council’s committees on Science and Science and Technology Enterprise will lead the group. The committee will initially focus on administrative burdens on federally-funded research, securing research assets, rigor and integrity in research and the existence of safe, inclusive and equitable research settings. Officials from the National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy will be part of the committee. 

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