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Salt Lake City

Was the FAA a Cyberwar Casualty?

by Tim Sullivan on November 20, 2009 · 0 comments

FAACyberAttackThe FAA computer systems had a major glitch on Thursday. It lasted about 5 hours and impacted all flyers causing cancellation and massive delays.

Multiple Failures
Christopher Hinton of MarketWatch.com reported, “The National Airspace Data Interchange Network failed at both its locations — Atlanta and Salt Lake City, just after 5:15 a.m. Eastern Time, according to the FAA and the National Air Traffic Controllers Association.”

NATCA Statement
“A ‘ripple effect’ is expected to impact the region’s flights throughout the day, NATCA said. Airports in the Northeast were heavily impacted, with Washington Dulles, Ronald Reagan National, Newark International, and New York’s JFK, reporting significant delays. Atlanta International, the world’s busiest airport, was also impacted.”

Delta Statement
“As a result of this morning’s FAA flight plan system outage, Delta is continuing to experience some delays and cancellations,” the world’s largest airline and Atlanta-based carrier said in a statement. “Operations are slowly returning to normal and we are working with impacted passengers.”

The obvious question: how do both systems fail at the same time?
That question actually raises another question: could this failure be the result of cyberwarriors? There’s been lots of recent discussion about other nation states ability and willingness to wage cyberwar against the US infrastructure. It’s hard to believe that both systems would fail at the same time. These are critical systems to our National infrastructure. Mobility and business suffered greatly during this 5 hour disruption. Just think how badly a multi-day outage would impact the US.

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NSA To Build $1.5 Billion Data Center

by Tim Sullivan on November 6, 2009 · 0 comments

NSADataCenterThe National Security Agency (NSA) will soon break ground in Utah for a new cyber security data center that’s budgeted at $1.5 billion. The NSA facility will provide cybersecurity intelligence and warnings as well as provide support to defense and civilian agency networks.

“Our country must continue to advance its national security efforts and that includes improvements in cybersecurity. As we rely more and more on our communications networks for business, government and everyday use, we must be vigilant and provide agencies with the necessary resources to protect our country from a cyber attack.”
-Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah

Offering a hand to Homeland
They will also lend technical assistance to the Department of Homeland Security, according to a transcript of remarks by Glenn Gaffney, deputy director of national intelligence for collection, who is responsible for oversight of cyber intelligence activities in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

Located in Utah
The data center will be built a few miles south of Salt Lake City at Camp Williams, a National Guard training center. It was chosen for its access to cheap power, communications infrastructure, and availability of space, Gaffney said. The complex will comprise up to 1.5 million square feet of building space on between 120 to 200 acres, according to news sources.

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