In a cyberattack disaster, DoD needs backup squad to fix networks, restart critical systems Mark Pomerleau
(Capt. Benjamin Hughes/Maryland National Guard) WASHINGTON With a growing number of cyber breaches, lawmakers and outside experts are pushing to increase the role of the National Guard and National Reserve if a catastrophic cyberattack were to occur. The idea is to create a special cyber reserve force for crises, and to do a better job of using the cyber expertise of Guard members. These recommendations come from the bipartisan Cyberspace Solarium Commission, created by Congress in 2019 to develop a multipronged U.S. cyber strategy to prevent a so-called cyber 9/11. Now, the Defense Department must evaluate the cyber reserve idea and clarify how the state-focused Guard could help with significant federal cyber events, as ordered by the 2021 defense policy law.
In a cyberattack disaster, DoD needs backup squad to fix networks, restart critical systems
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In a cyberattack disaster, DoD needs backup squad to fix networks, restart critical systems
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Festa com 500 pessoas em São Paulo é interrompida pelo Procon
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The Enterprise proved the viability of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, and so much more.
Here s What You Need to Know:
Enterprise circled the globe three times, conducted twenty-five overseas cruises and completed an astonishing four hundred thousand aircraft landings in its lifetime.
The first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier ever built carries one of the most famous names in flattop history:
Enterprise. Designed as the nucleus of a nuclear-powered task force that could travel indefinitely without fuel replenishment, the USS
Enterprise set the standard for all U.S. aircraft carriers to the present day.
In August 1950 the chief of naval operations, Adm. Forrest Sherman, requested a feasibility study for nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. A shore-based nuclear reactor was built as a test, and based on the success of the so-called A1W reactor authorization, and funds for a nuclear carrier was approved in 1958.