Sea-Air-Space: Zero Trust is ‘The Best Approach’ For Military Cybersecurity
Marines Cyber Technology Officer Shery Thomas discusses identity management across networks and devices.
The Marine Corps needs to balance security and accessibility challenges that come with having many devices and systems working together.
At Sea-Air-Space in National Harbor, Maryland, Marines Cyber Technology Officer Shery Thomas briefs implementation plans for zero trust as part of the Defense Department’s broader plan to adopt zero trust architectures by 2027.
Thomas also discusses how end user safety and artificial intelligence fits into this plan.
Follow more of our Sea-Air-Space coverage.
This is a carousel with manually rotating slides. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate or jump to a slide with the slide dots
-
Staying Ahead of AI-Driven Cyber Threats
Robert Roser shares insights on emerging cybercrime trends, supply chain risks and how federal organizations can build stronger security through zero trust.
8m watch -
The Federal CIO Tracker: Running List
Stay informed on the latest shifts in federal technology leadership as new CIOs are appointed and President Trump's second term takes shape.
6m read -
CISA Tells Agencies to Remove These Vulnerable Edge Devices
CISA guidance requires agencies to replace unsupported edge devices and strengthen lifecycle management to reduce attack surfaces.
3m read -
How Data Visibility, Zero Trust Are Key to Mission-Embedded AI
Federal agencies are grappling with how to assess artificial intelligence models safely and ensure they meet cybersecurity standards.
9m watch Partner Content