The federal government offered cybersecurity assistance to state and local entities during the 2016 election, but they resisted the help, President Obama’s Homeland Security secretary testified Wednesday.
Republican nominee Donal Trump may be the new president-elect, but federal IT contractors overwhelmingly put their money on Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton to win the race.
Nov 8, 2016
Trump speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference. (Gage Skidmore via Creative Commons 3.0)
Pressure is building on the Obama administration to publicly identify the Russian hackers officials believe are behind cyberattacks on both the Democratic and Republican national parties.
In the wake of a data breach that has caused their leader to resign, the Democratic National Committee is creating a cybersecurity advisory board to help concentrate…
The FBI's recommendation that presumptive democratic presidential contender Hillary Clinton should not face charges in connection with her use of personal email servers for official communications while…
Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton will continue the digital government progress of President Barack Obama if elected this fall, making the U.S Digital Service a "permanent part of…
Jun 28, 2016
Republican presidential candidate and former Gov. Jeb Bush speaks at the Fox Business Network Republican presidential candidates debate Thursday in North Charleston, South Carolina. (Chris Keane/Reuters)
The Department of Homeland Security should be stripped of its responsibility to defend civilian U.S. government computer networks in favor of the National Security Agency, GOP presidential…
The Federal Election Commission launched a new public website Thursday built with the help of 18F, and aimed at improving Americans' access to political fundraising and campaign…