[iwar] [fc:White.House.asks.industry.to.develop.secure.federal.network]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-10-25 20:41:22


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Date: Thu, 25 Oct 2001 20:41:22 -0700 (PDT)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:White.House.asks.industry.to.develop.secure.federal.network]
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White House asks industry to develop secure federal network 
By Bara Vaida, National Journal's Technology Daily, 10/25/2001
<a href="http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1001/102501td1.htm">http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1001/102501td1.htm>

President Bush's special adviser on cybersecurity on Wednesday told
hundreds of information technology specialists that he wants the private
sector's recommendations on how to build a secure nationwide intranet
for government agencies and their estimates on its cost. 

Richard Clarke also said the private sector would build the intranet, to
be called Govnet, and then lease it back to the government in exchange
for a service fee. 

"We want to build as secure an intranet as possible--one that taxpayers
can rely on to be 100 percent safe ...  a network that is separate from
the routers connected to the Internet," Clarke told IT officials
gathered at the Commerce Department.  He said there has been a 66
percent increase in virus attacks on computer networks in the past year. 
He added that computer viruses are becoming smarter and mutating,
raising the possibility of a "devastating cyber attack" on government
computer systems. 

"Our enemies are smart, and they know how to use our technology against
us," he said.  Two weeks ago, at the direction of Clarke, the General
Services Administration posted a request for information seeking
private-sector ideas on the possibility of building a special network
for key government functions.  Clarke said he had been working on the
idea for about a year and first briefed Bush about a private government
network in May.  He said Bush expressed interest but wanted to know the
cost. 

"We have had a variety of tech people ask us, 'What can we do to help?'"
he said.  "It is in that spirit that we ask you to build an intranet ... 
and to tell us how much it will cost."

Clarke underscored that Govnet would not replace government agencies'
use of the Internet to provide public information but rather would be
used for critical agency information only.  Each agency would pay a
service fee to connect to Govnet, and each agency would decide what it
considers critical and top-secret information. 

No agency could connect to the Govnet unless it had demonstrated a level
of computer security to ensure that no intruders could access Govnet. 
Clarke noted that no government agency has that level of computer
security now.  Private-sector recommendations on Govnet are due Nov. 
21, and GSA expects to post an analysis of the recommendations and an
idea for moving forward by the end of January.  If the administration
agrees to ask high-tech companies to build Govnet, officials estimate
that it would take about a year-and-a-half to launch the network. 
Several news reports over the past week have quoted security experts as
criticizing the Govnet idea, charging that no computer network can be
completely insulated from attack. 

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