The Army has been testing an application that would let its soldiers and civilian employees access the Army’s network through their personal devices. It is ready to scale up from under a thousand users to almost 20,000 employees. Lt. Gen. John Morrison, Army deputy chief of staff, G-6, provides more details on lessons learned from the program’s pilot, associated cybersecurity concerns, and how zero trust principles play a crucial role in securing data access. Morrison also touches on the Army’s new Google Workspace partnership and laying the foundation for DevSecOps.
CyberCast
11m listen
Live from AUSA: Army Deputy Chief of Staff Says Service to Significantly Scale Up Bring Your Own Device Program
Lt. Gen. John Morrison says Army plans to increase BYOD program users to 20,000.
-
Lt. Gen. John B. Morrison Deputy Chief of Staff, G6 Army
Related Content
-
NIST Center Helps Translate Cyber Standards into Practice
Interagency agreements and the collaboration model at the National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence advance cybersecurity.
15m listen -
DISA Using AI to Secure Multi-Cloud Environments
The Defense Information Systems Agency is harnessing artificial intelligence to secure multi-cloud environments.
13m listen -
How an NCI Data Registry is Helping Diagnose, Treat Rare Pediatric Cancers
The Rare Cancer Initiative is enabling the research community to access more clinical data to improve health outcomes for children diagnosed with rare cancers.
20m listen -
GAO’s Take on Harmonizing Cybersecurity Policy Across Government
Bringing together technology policy requires an “all-of-government” approach, a recent report says.
23m listen