I-95 Cybersecurity corridor expected to blossom

MS Patch Tuesday preview, White House sees no cyberattack in Wall Street plunge

Cybersecurity Update – Tune in weekdays at 30 minutes past the hour for the latest cybersecurity news on The Federal Drive with Tom Temin and Jane Norris (6-10 a.m.) and The Daily Debrief with Chris Dorobek and Amy Morris (3-7 p.m.). Listen live at FederalNewsRadio.com or on the radio at 1500 and 820 AM in the Washington, D.C. metro area.

  • With DISA’s move to Ft. Meade in Maryland as the result of BRAC, expect private industry to follow suit. A former AOL executive tells the Washington Post the demand for cybersecurity reaches far beyond the military into areas like health care and financial infrastructure, so creating a true cybersecurity cluster will mean drawing companies that work in other sectors. More than a dozen companies up and down I-95 from Baltimore to DC have already indicated they are expanding cyber practices.
  • Patch Tuesday will be a fairly quiet one for Microsoft, but an important one for you. Microsoft will fix two programs with updates for several versions of Windows and Office. The fixes are critical for some systems. In April, Microsoft issued 11 security patches fixing 25 flaws.
  • It’s something a lot of people probably thought about – but the White House says it didn’t happen. The Obama administration’s adviser for homeland security and counterterrorism issues says there is no evidence that a cyber attack is to blame for the wild action on Wall Street this past Thursday. John Brennan told “Fox News Sunday” that officials have turned up no links suggesting the turbulence in the Dow Jones industrials was caused by an online attack. The key stock index dropped nearly 1,000 points before launching a rally that partially recovered those losses before the end of the trading day.

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