[ISN] DARPA awards network security deal

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Mon Feb 23 2004 - 09:16:12 PST

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    http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2004/0223/web-darpa-02-23-04.asp
    
    By Matthew French 
    Feb. 23, 2004
    
    The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency last week awarded an 
    $8.7 million increment of a $13.2 million contract to Springfield, 
    Va.-based Computer Systems Center Inc. (CSCI) for work on dynamic 
    network security applications.
    
    DARPA awarded CSCI the Information-on-Demand project, a study to 
    determine whether dynamic network security access is possible. Agency 
    officials plan to have the project completed by March 2005. 
    
    Dynamic network security enables users to have multiple levels of 
    security access from one workstation. The Defense Department has been 
    seeking dynamic network security for years to allow its employees and 
    military personnel to use one workstation for both secure and 
    nonsecure applications.
    
    CSCI's flagship product, Trusted Information Infrastructure, is 
    designed to allow the secure transfer of information between secure 
    networks at multiple levels, with individuals accessing data on a 
    need-to-know basis.
    
    Defense chief information officer John Stenbit, speaking Jan. 20 to 
    industry officials, said assigning dynamic access to end users is one 
    of DOD's top priorities in its pursuit of a network-centric military.
    
    "We need to assign dynamic access so that you get access to data, 
    rather than based on who you are, based on what your job is at that 
    moment," Stenbit said. "If you're a cook in the Army, you need to know 
    where the potatoes are or where the pans are. But if they then give 
    you a gun and tell you to guard this corner, you need to have access 
    to the intelligence of what is happening in that area. We can't do 
    that today."
    
    "This feasibility study will demonstrate that sharing secure 
    information on demand is possible, and not only in research and 
    development," said Peter Anderson, CSCI's chief technology officer. 
    
    
    
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