Retired Navy Rear Admiral writes book on being a leader, while enjoying life
Buffalo native Retired Rear Admiral Danelle Barrett has a new book coming out with a lot of great advice about being a great leader and actually enjoying your life. Author: Kate Welshofer Updated: 1:39 PM EDT April 28, 2021
BUFFALO, N.Y. Retired Rear Admiral Danelle Barrett grew up here in Buffalo. Her 30 year career in the Navy took her all over the world.
She is a wife and the mom of a professional ballerina. It s a lot of life.
Now, she is back here in Buffalo and she has a new book coming out with a lot of great advice about being a great leader and actually enjoying your life.
Former Rear Admiral Danelle Barrett has a new book about leadership Rock The Boat comes out in June
She retired from the Navy, moved back to Western New York and has a book coming out in June. It s about leadership and embracing change and is called Rock The Boat . Danelle says You gotta rock the boat right, stir up things a little bit.
and last updated 2021-04-02 07:48:15-04
BUFFALO, NY (WKBW-TV) â When Danelle Barrett was about ten years old she went on a sleep over to the Naval Park. That s when she got hooked on the idea of a career in the military and a life of service to her county.
Reports had warned about supply chain hacks January 12 The SolarWinds breach shows the risk the U.S. Department of Defense faces from supply chain threats. (cybrain/Getty Images) WASHINGTON – Twice in the last four years, the national security community warned that hacks through IT suppliers posed grave threats to defense and intelligence agencies. Last month, those warnings proved prescient after suspected Russian hackers infiltrated federal agencies through a contractor’s software. While intelligence officials said Jan. 5 the hack is an espionage campaign, confirming Russia as the likely source, the two recent reports alerted the community that hackers could disrupt weapons systems by attacking through the supply chain. Those reports suggested the Pentagon must quickly develop methods to reduce risk from its suppliers.
‘Very difficult to defend’: What happens if hackers are inside the Pentagon’s networks? December 27, 2020 The U.S. Department of Defense faces a tough challenge assessing its networks after suspected Russian hackers may have had access for months. (Aislan13/Getty Images) WASHINGTON If Russian hackers suspected of a vast cybersecurity breach slipped into the Pentagon or military’s computer systems, the strength of protective network blockades is key to keeping them from burrowing in to try to access increasing amounts of information. Those protections in the form of secure network connections have to stand up to meddling to keep hackers from hopping from network to network to potentially reach sensitive communications or even weapon systems, where they could steal or alter data or cause damage, experts say. However, observers point out that this breach appears so far to be a classic espionage campaign, though with some of the most sophisticated methods seen yet
‘It’s going to take a lot of digging’: The Pentagon’s long search to see if anyone’s hiding in its networks December 17, 2020 The Pentagon s investigation of whether hackers infiltrated its networks in the SolarWinds breach will be difficult. (JuSun/Getty Images) WASHINGTON – The military and intelligence community is scrambling to conduct a daunting hunt across disconnected networks to assess potential damage from an extensive federal cybersecurity breach by suspected Russian hackers. As it searches for lurkers, one complicating factor is that the cybersecurity arm of the Department of Homeland Security warned Thursday that hackers used other means to access government and business networks beyond a software platform from contractor SolarWinds, used by the Pentagon, the military and intelligence offices. That network management platform was “not the only initial infection vector,” the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency alert said.