[ISN] Cyber adviser leaving government

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Tue Apr 22 2003 - 22:23:16 PDT

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    http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2003/0421/web-schmidt-04-22-03.asp
    
    By Diane Frank 
    April 22, 2003
    
    Top White House cybersecurity adviser Howard Schmidt has announced
    that he is leaving the Bush administration for the private sector as
    of May 1.
    
    Schmidt served as the vice chairman of the President's Critical
    Infrastructure Protection (CIP) Board until the administration
    dissolved it in March. In an e-mail message this week, he announced
    that although many of the board's responsibilities are being
    transferred to the Homeland Security Department (DHS), he is retiring
    from public service.
    
    "This has been no more than a two- or three-year assignment for me at
    most," Schmidt said in an interview with Federal Computer Week. "It's
    been a great opportunity to champion this topic that some of us have
    been working on for years."
    
    Schmidt said he already is meeting with Robert Liscouski, assistant
    secretary of infrastructure protection at DHS and a longtime
    colleague, to work on a smooth transfer of all the work the board has
    been doing.
    
    "Bob has been working literally overtime doing meetings" to ensure
    that the relationships created by the board in government and with the
    private sector continue with the transition, he said.
    
    Concern has been expressed over the number of cybersecurity leaders
    leaving government and the lack of a single official in charge of
    security at the highest levels.
    
    "We are concerned...that the cybersecurity issue is losing visibility
    inside the White House," said Harris Miller, president of the
    Information Technology Association of America, in a statement. "In
    this case, the 'bully pulpit' opportunity to influence the development
    of a truly secure cyber infrastructure and associated best practices
    will be lost."
    
    However, Schmidt said the loud central voice that the board provided
    to bring attention to the cybersecurity issue is no longer necessary.
    
    "A lot of the big work is already done from the government side, and a
    lot of the work that is left is in the hands of the private sector,"  
    he said. "[The private sector] will continue to have an advocate in
    the government through [Liscouski], through NIST...there will still be
    attention and focus."
    
    Although he plans to return to private-sector work -- most likely as a
    chief security officer for a company whose "entire brand is about
    trust" -- Schmidt said he will continue to work to implement the
    National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace, which he helped craft and
    which the administration released in February. He particularly would
    like to raise awareness within the private sector about industry's
    responsibility to secure the infrastructure it oversees.
    
    "I will still continue to work this issue on a national and even
    international level," Schmidt said.
    
    Several other top cybersecurity officials have left most notably
    Richard Clarke, the chairman of the CIP Board, and John Tritak,
    director of the Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office (CIAO). Both
    announced their departures in January before the critical
    infrastructure work officially transferred to DHS.
    
    The CIAO is now part of the Information Analysis and Infrastructure
    Protection Directorate at DHS, and is being integrated into a single
    organization also made up of the National Infrastructure Protection
    Center, the Federal Computer Incident Response Center and others.
     
     
    
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