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DoD/News
Donald Trump’s Defense Transition Team Taps Trae Stephens
by Jay Clemens
Published on November 28, 2016
Donald Trump’s Defense Transition Team Taps Trae Stephens


PentagonTrae Stephens, a principal at Peter Thiel’s venture capital fund Founders Fund, has joined the transition team of President-elect Donald Trump for the Defense Department, Space News reported Friday.

Jeff Foust writes Stephens previously worked for Palantir Technologies, a data analytics firm part of Founders Fund’s portfolio.

He will be assigned to the landing team tasked to oversee transition at the Pentagon along with nine other members of the transition team, according to the report.

Space News reports a 10th member was added to the team on Nov. 21.

Thiel co-founded Founders Fund in 2005 and the fund invested $20 million in SpaceX in July 2008 before funding rounds Google and Fidelity conducted in November 2010 and January 2015 to support the Elon Musk-owned launch services company, Foust reports.

Government Technology/News
Report: DoD Eyes $3B Investment for Underwater Drone Development
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 28, 2016
Report: DoD Eyes $3B Investment for Underwater Drone Development


underwaterdroneThe Defense Department plans to invest up to $3 billion in funds in an effort to build and field unmanned underwater vehicles designed to perform surveillance operations, the Washington Post reported Thursday.

Rear Adm. Mathias Winter, head of the Office of Naval Research, said at a Center for Strategic and International Studies-hosted conference that ONR plans to develop an “Eisenhower highway network” of UUVs that will work to map the ocean floor and “go out for decades at a time.”

Christian Davenport writes the U.S. Navy also plans to establish underwater stations designed to allow undersea drones to recharge.

Frank Herr, head of the ONR’s ocean battlespace sensing department, told the publication that such undersea communication and energy outposts will serve as a “place where you can gas up or charge your underwater vehicles, transfer data and maybe store some data.”

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency also plans to place 15-foot-tall underwater pods designed to detect signals and deploy aerial drones to perform surveillance missions, according to the report.

 

DoD/News
WSJ: US, Western Allies Urge Iran to Cut Enriched Uranium Stockpile
by Ramona Adams
Published on November 28, 2016
WSJ: US, Western Allies Urge Iran to Cut Enriched Uranium Stockpile


Nuclear powerplantThe U.S. and western allies have called on Iran to reduce its enriched uranium stockpile as part of the 2015 nuclear accord, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.

Laurence Norman writes western officials said plans to reduce Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile could prevent conflicts between U.S. and Iran over the implementation of the nuclear deal once President-elect Donald Trump takes office.

Iran, U.S., U.K., Russia, France, China and Germany signed the pact in 2015.

Iranian officials have discussed the U.S. government’s plans to extend economic sanctions against Iran for another decade which U.S. representatives approved this week, Norman reported.

The nuclear deal requires Iran to cap its enriched uranium stockpile at 661 pounds over the next 15 years and limit heavy water stockpile at 143.3 tons.

Civilian/News
GAO: FAA Should Review Regulatory Framework for Space Support Vehicles, Clarify Financial Responsibility Rules to Spaceport Operators
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 28, 2016
GAO: FAA Should Review Regulatory Framework for Space Support Vehicles, Clarify Financial Responsibility Rules to Spaceport Operators


rocket-launchThe Government Accountability Office has recommended the Transportation Department’s secretary to call on the Federal Aviation Administration chief to analyze whether FAA’s regulatory structure is applicable to space support vehicles.

DOT should also suggest modifications to regulations to FAA if it finds that the regulatory framework is not suitable for such vehicles, GAO said in a report published Friday.

GAO made the recommendations after it conducted interviews with NASA and FAA officials as well as 37 officials from space support firms, legal experts and other industry stakeholders and found that FAA regulations pose a market challenge to commercial space companies that seek to receive payments for the use of space support vehicles in passenger and cargo transportation.

Some company officials told GAO that the standard aircraft certification process that FAA’s office of aviation safety implements for space support vehicles “is lengthy and not designed for the type of vehicles they would like to use.”

GAO said in a separate report published Nov. 22 that FAA should also clarify to spaceport operators the agency’s financial responsibility rules for commercial space launches.

The congressional budget watchdog made the suggestion after several spaceport operators said they were not sure whether to buy their own insurance for their property or whether a launch firm’s insurance policy would provide coverage for their property in the event of a space launch mishap.

According to the report, three of the 10 spaceport operators have both liability and property coverage to insure them from losses associated with launch accidents.

GAO also noted that space launch industry stakeholders have different views on the need for changes to the current insurance method, in which spaceport operators and launch companies can negotiate insurance coverage for spaceports through contracts.

Civilian/News
University of California Berkeley Makes Cyber Suggestions for Trump Administration
by Scott Nicholas
Published on November 23, 2016
University of California Berkeley Makes Cyber Suggestions for Trump Administration


cyberwarfareThe University of California, Berkeley center has recommended president-elect Donald Trump’s transition team team up with Silicon Valley in a push to bolster the U.S.’ cyber workforce, USA Today reported Friday.

Erin Kelley writes UC Berkeley’s Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity also suggested the incoming transition team to establish a new agency for the development of new digital security strategies as part of five cybersecurity suggestions announced at a Bipartisan Policy Center discussion.

“The new administration has an important opportunity to change the way Americans think about cybersecurity,” said a report presented by Betsy Cooper, UC Berkeley executive director, and Steven Weber, UC Berkeley faculty director.

“We believe cybersecurity needs to be thought of as an existential risk to core American interests and values, rising close to the level of major armed conflict and climate change.”

Recommendations from the UC Berkeley team include the recruitment of cybersecurity professionals with an incentive of deferred student loans, addition of cybersecurity and computer literacy in the nation’s schools as well as the development of a Cyber Advanced Research Projects Agency.

DoD/News
Terry Halvorsen: DoD to Test New Multi-factor Authentication Mechanisms After Christmas
by Ramona Adams
Published on November 23, 2016
Terry Halvorsen: DoD to Test New Multi-factor Authentication Mechanisms After Christmas


Terry Halvorsen
Terry Halvorsen

The Defense Department plans to launch pilot programs to test new authentication mechanisms after the Christmas holiday as part of efforts to eliminate the need for common access cards within two years, Federal News Radio reported Wednesday.

Terry Halvorsen, DoD chief information officer, said at AFCEA’s TechNet conference in Honolulu he sought industry proposals for identity management technologies that provide 10-factor security without the use of smart cards or other additional hardware, Jared Serbu wrote.

Halvorsen added he has received four proposals that await his review, Serbu reported.

“The whole CAC infrastructure limits what we can do to get information to people, and frankly it makes me have to adapt security measures that sometimes aren’t all that secure,” Halvorsen said.

Halvorsen noted the department needs to replace smart cards to align with new technologies and address costs and convenience, the report stated.

Government Technology/News
Supreme Court Approves DOJ Search Warrant Rule Amendment to Support Botnet Investigations
by Ramona Adams
Published on November 23, 2016
Supreme Court Approves DOJ Search Warrant Rule Amendment to Support Botnet Investigations

cyber-hack-network-computerThe Supreme Court has approved the Justice Department‘s proposed amendment that will help investigators streamline search warrant applications and dismantle botnet operations.

Leslie Caldwell, assistant attorney general at DOJ’s criminal division, wrote in a blog post published Tuesday the amendment to the Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure on search warrants will take effect on Dec. 1, 2016.

The amendment will permit botnet investigators to bring a search warrant application to one federal court rather than apply for identical warrants in up to 94 judicial districts if they want to investigate infected computers across the U.S., Caldwell said.

“The rule would make no changes to the substantive law governing probable cause or particularity, or to when it may or may not be appropriate to search an infected computer,” Caldwell noted.

“The only thing the rule would do is identify a single court that is authorized to consider those questions in the context of an application for a search warrant,” she added.

Caldwell said DOJ should engage in more operations to mitigate mass hacking such as the collective effort of the FBI, various countries and computer security companies in 2014 to dismantle the Gameover Zeus botnet that allegedly stole more than $100 million from American victims.

Botnets are networks of computers infected with malware and are remotely controlled by criminals to invade victims’ privacy and access personal or financial information.

Civilian/News
CBO: NOAA Effort to Capture Coronal Mass Ejections Would Cost $182M Through 2021
by Ramona Adams
Published on November 23, 2016
CBO: NOAA Effort to Capture Coronal Mass Ejections Would Cost $182M Through 2021


BudgetThe Congressional Budget Office has estimated that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration‘s future effort to capture imagery of coronal mass ejections would cost $182 million from 2017 to 2021.

The Space Weather Research and Forecasting Act requires NOAA to capture images of earth-directed CMEs or the sun’s release of large quantities of matter and electromagnetic radiation, CBO said Tuesday.

The amount will be used to obtain a coronagraph, a spacecraft and a launch vehicle by 2022, according to the cost estimate report.

NOAA would need additional budget in 2022 and beyond to operate and maintain the spacecraft and coronagraph, CBO added.

The report stated the bill will work to codify multi-agency efforts under the National Space Weather Program and will not impose costs on state, local, or tribal governments.

CBO said enacting the bill would not increase net direct spending or on-budget deficits in the four consecutive 10-year periods starting in 2027.

Civilian/News
DoD Unveils New Call and Outreach Center for Confidential Peer Support; Wendy Lakso Comments
by Scott Nicholas
Published on November 23, 2016
DoD Unveils New Call and Outreach Center for Confidential Peer Support; Wendy Lakso Comments


mobile appThe Defense Department has opened a new call and outreach center that will provide confidential peer support to active duty national guardsmen, reservists, service members and family members via 24/7 chat, phone and text.

DoD said Tuesday the “BeThere” peer support call and outreach center will have staff members that include veteran service members as well as family members of veterans who will look to support callers on inquiries regarding career and general life problems.

“We are honored to support our service members and their families as they get connected to needed resources through the support of those who have also served our country,” said Wendy Lakso, the Defense Suicide Prevention Office’s director for outreach and education.

Triwest Healthcare Alliance oversees the administration of the BeThere Call and Outreach Center in 50 states and offers worldwide service via live chat, DoD noted.

“This unique population deserves and will receive our full focus in offering high-quality, easily accessible assistance,” added Dave McIntyre, TriWest Healthcare Alliance president and CEO.

Government Technology/News
Arati Prabhakar: DARPA Aims to Leverage Space Domain Through Experimental Spaceplane Program, Robotics
by Jane Edwards
Published on November 23, 2016
Arati Prabhakar: DARPA Aims to Leverage Space Domain Through Experimental Spaceplane Program, Robotics


Arati Prabhakar
Arati Prabhakar

Arati Prabhakar, director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, has said DARPA has launched programs that seek to make the space environment a “real-time operational domain” in support of military missions, intelligence and other national security efforts, DoD News reported Tuesday.

Cheryl Pellerin writes Prabhakar said at the 4th annual Defense One Summit that DARPA has introduced the second phase of its Experimental Spaceplane program that seeks to expedite the launch of satellite systems and other assets into space.

The XS-1 program “is a reusable first stage that’s designed to be able to put 3,000 or 5,000 pounds into low earth orbit … at a very low cost point — a few million dollars — but very significantly the objective on the DARPA program is by the end of the program to fly that spacecraft 10 times in 10 days,” Prabhakar said during a conversation with Christopher Mims, technology columnist for the Wall Street Journal, at the event.

She also discussed DARPA’s work on robotics systems designed to facilitate repairs and inspections of space assets at geostationary Earth orbit through the Phoenix program, according to the report.

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