04/5/12

nMap Project -Google Summer Camp

Hi Folks.  I'm happy to announce that the Nmap Project has again been
accepted into the Google Summer of Code program.  This innovative and
extraordinarily generous program provides $5,000 stipends to college
and graduate students who want to spend the summer improving Nmap!
They gain valuable experience, get paid, strengthen their résumé, and
write code for millions of users.

Previous SoC students helped create the Nmap Scripting Engine, Ncat,
and the Zenmap GUI.  Several even became top developers!  But I need
your help to get the word out to top candidates.  So if you know any
college/grad students (or are one) who might be interested, please
point them to our project ideas page at http://nmap.org/soc/.  Feel
free to post this to any lists or forums that talented students might
read.  But hurry, because the application deadline is THIS FRIDAY at
Noon (U.S. Pacific Time)!  That is 19:00 UTC.

Thanks,
Fyodor

PS: We're also working on a major new Nmap release, but I'll send
    details on that in a couple weeks when it is ready.

PPS: Trinity has signed up as our new Facebook cover model!  You can
     get more Nmap news by following us at:

     http://facebook.com/nmap
     http://twitter.com/nmap
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05/13/11

Federal Government Recruiting Cyber Security Job Candidates – FoxNews.com

While many Americans worry about terrorists attacking transportation systems or national landmarks, experts say the more likely target is at their fingertips.

With more and more people, businesses, and government agencies conducting their business online, cyberspace has become especially tantalizing, and protecting it, increasingly urgent.

Jim Wunderman, president of the Bay Area Council which represents the interests of several hundred companies, puts it bluntly.

“The next major threat to our country probably won’t come by land, sea or air. It’s going to come from cyberspace, and we better be ready for it,” he said.

“It” includes attacks by so-called “cyber militias,” widely believed to be supported by governments in China and Russia, to the random bad actor intent on shutting down critical infrastructure, like power plants, electric grids, and bank ATM’s.

To fend off such attacks, the federal government is looking for more help. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano is making her pitch to university students across the country. She recently spoke at MIT and UC Berkeley, hoping to lure those who can help protect public and private sectors.

“We need a strong, innovated group of people who are willing to take on the incredible challenge that the protection of cyber space demands,” Napolitano said.

Many believe the government’s recruiting effort comes in the midst of a national emergency. “We’re already under attack in the cyber world,” says retired Major Gen. Dale Meyerrose, a cyber expert with the Harris Group. “I’ve seen several studies that say American businesses lose a trillion dollars a year through cyber crime.”

The challenge is finding the right talent, in the right numbers, as quickly as possible.

“The CIA says there’s only about 1,000 people operating in our country right now who truly have the technical capacity to serve in the field and protect our critical infrastructure where there’s actually need for probably 30,000 of these people,” says the Bay Area Council’s Wunderman.

According to a recent Bay Area Council poll, more than 70 percent of Americans say cybersecurity is a national security issue, and two-thirds are looking to Washington to do more to protect computer networks and Internet users.

This week, the White House released it’s cybersecurity plan, and Congress has been debating several bills for years. It’s complex, and the debate isn’t likely to end soon. But supporters hope that eventually, there will be clear, standardized protocols in the event of an attack, and better strategies to reduce cyber threats.

As the Department of Homeland Security seeks to broaden its authority over cybersecurity, it’s set aside $24-million to train scientists, engineers and analysts, and create a diverse workforce of high tech and policy professions to help protect the nation’s digital border.



Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/05/13/federal-government-recruiting-cyber-security-job-candidates/#ixzz1MHErzBBP

via Federal Government Recruiting Cyber Security Job Candidates – FoxNews.com.

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