COVID-19 is changing the Air Force’s cyber training
The Air Force has postponed much of its internal network cyber training at the expense of cyber mission force personnel to avoid readiness issues.
The Air Force has postponed much of its internal network cyber training at the expense of cyber mission force personnel to avoid readiness issues.
The service is looking for assistance in defensive and possibly offensive cybersecurity of operational technology.
The Air Force has selected an Air National Guard base to be the center for training its defensive cyber teams.
Less than a year after being created, 16th Air Force reached its full operational capability this week.
Hackers could also search for vulnerabilities in a system from the U.K.'s Ministry of Defence.
The Air Force’s new information warfare command will open an operations center in March as part of a broader effort to better integrate the service’s information-related capabilities.
With a lack of good training opportunities, one Air Force unit took matters into their own hands to develop a competition aimed at developing better defensive cyber tradecraft and tactics.
Here's what happened after the network shut down.
A new proposal released by the Air Force is asking for industry help in monitoring power and control networks from cyberthreats.
Initially created to look at legacy weapon systems, the Air Force CROWS office will be taking aim at ensuring cybersecurity concerns are taken into account from the start of new programs.