Peraton names leaders for after Perspecta deal closes
Ahead of the close of its combination of Perspecta, Peraton has unveiled the executive team that will lead the future combined company.
We’ve previously reported that Stu Shea, Peraton CEO, will continue on as CEO of the company. Perspecta CEO Mac Curtis has announced his intent to retire.
The team Shea announced in a company-wide memo released in this Securities and Exchange Commission filing includes a mix of a Peraton and Perspecta executives, with a couple folks from the recent acquisition of Northrop Grumman’s IT services business.
Corporate leaders include:
America has a serious infrastructure problem.
Maybe when I say that what comes to mind are all the potholes on your street. Or the dismal state of public transportation in your city. Or crumbling bridges all over the country. But that s so twentieth century of you.
America s most urgent infrastructure vulnerability is largely invisible and unlikely to be fixed by the Biden administration s $2 trillion American Jobs Plan.
I m thinking about vulnerabilities that lurk in your garage (your car), your house (your computer), and even your pocket (your phone). Like those devices of yours, all connected to the Internet and so hackable, American businesses, hospitals, and public utilities can also be hijacked from a distance thanks to the software that helps run their systems. And don t think that the U.S. military and even cybersecurity agencies and firms aren t seriously at risk, too.
Waiting for the cyber-apocalypse
America has a serious infrastructure problem.
Maybe when I say that what comes to mind are all the potholes on your street. Or the dismal state of public transportation in your city. Or crumbling bridges all over the country. But that’s so twentieth century of you.
America’s most urgent infrastructure vulnerability is largely invisible and unlikely to be fixed by the Biden administration’s $2 trillion American Jobs Plan.
I’m thinking about vulnerabilities that lurk in your garage (your car), your house (your computer), and even your pocket (your phone). Like those devices of yours, all connected to the Internet and so hackable, American businesses, hospitals, and public utilities can also be hijacked from a distance thanks to the software that helps run their systems. And don’t think that the U.S. military and even cybersecurity agencies and firms aren’t seriously at risk, too.
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