2003
SecurE-Biz Executive Summit
April 1-2, Hilton Crystal City
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Keyword

  1. ABC
  2. ABM
  3. Access and Delivery Channels
  4. Access Management
  5. Actionable Architectures
  6. Actionable Architectures: Out of the Box with Smart Practices
  7. Agreement on Semantics
  8. Air Force, Operational Views
  9. Air Force, System View
  10. Air Force, Technical View
  11. Air, Space & Terrestrial Network
  12. Alert Condition
  13. All business processes and systems are relevant - logistics, personnel, health care, etc.
  14. Alternative authentication mechanisms, like Smartcards.
  15. ANSI/IEEE 1471/2000
  16. Any to Any Scenario
  17. Application Integration Guides
  18. Application Security
  19. Application Security Infrastructure
  20. Architecture and Infrastructure Committee
  21. Architecture Applied to Web Services
  22. Basic Pillars of Information Assurance
  23. Best Practices
  24. BLA
  25. BMSI
  26. BRM
  27. BRM SCRM DRM TRM
  28. Bruce Peat
  29. Business Analyst Portal
  30. Business Architecture
  31. Business Communities
  32. Business Components, Evolution
  33. Business Line
  34. Business Line Analyst
  35. Business Line Architecture
  36. Business Line Architectures
  37. Business Line Channels
  38. Business Line Gateway
  39. Business Line Hub
  40. Business Line Implementation
  41. Business Line Implementation Agreement
  42. Business Line Information Interoperability
  43. Business Line Integration
  44. Business Line Leader
  45. Business Logic
  46. Business Modernization and Systems Integration
  47. Business Process Specification and Design
  48. Business Reference Model
  49. Carrier IP network
  50. Carrier IP Networks, history and background
  51. CC
  52. CCEVS
  53. CCEVS Web Site
  54. Cederoth, Kay
  55. Certification
  56. Challenge, Revolutionary Partnership Approach
  57. Challenges, Air Force
  58. Challenges, Where’s the Architecture?
  59. CHCS
  60. CIO
  61. CIO Council
  62. CIO Key Functoins
  63. Clinger-Cohen Act
  64. CMM Rating
  65. Collaboration
  66. Collaboration, challenges
  67. Collaboration, Common Solutions
  68. Collaboration, examples at DoJ
  69. Collaboration, information sharing
  70. Collaboration, Security Initiatives at DoJ
  71. Collaborative Agreements
  72. Common Criteria
  73. Common Criteria Evaluation and Validation Scheme
  74. Common Information Model
  75. Common Infrastructure Patterns
  76. Communities of interest
  77. Competency Centers
  78. Component Service
  79. Components
  80. Components Subcommittee Process
  81. Composable Extension to the Value Chain
  82. Congressional Stakeholders
  83. Content Semantic Analysis
  84. Cooperation with DoD stakeholders is essential to success
  85. CORBA
  86. COTS
  87. Critical Care Product
  88. Cross-Agency
  89. Cross-Agency and Cross-Government Projects
  90. Cross-Government
  91. Current Performance Measurement
  92. Cyber Security Mission, FAA
  93. Cyber Security Mission, five layers of system protection
  94. Cyber Security, boundary protection
  95. Cyber Security, Computer Security Incident Response Center
  96. Cyber Security, National Information Assurance Certification and Accreditation Program
  97. DAA
  98. Damage potential, Reproducibility, Exploitability, Affected users, Discoverability
  99. Dan Mehan
  100. Data and Statistics Development
  101. Data Dictionary
  102. Data Interchange Analysis
  103. Data interoperability
  104. Data Warehouse
  105. DCOM
  106. Defense Authorization Bill
  107. Deployment and Outreach Effort
  108. Deployment Architectural View, Web Services
  109. Design, improving security of IP networks
  110. Design-Time Integration of Data
  111. Disasterhelp.gov
  112. Discovery
  113. DITSCAP
  114. Documenting how business is done
  115. DOD
  116. DOD Directive 8500.1
  117. DOD Instruction 8500.2
  118. DOD Wide Governance
  119. DOD, Military Health System
  120. DoD’s approach - SECDEF created special program dedicated to fixing FM
  121. DoD’s approach -- again following GAO’s recommendation - is to build an FM architecture
  122. DODI 8500.2
  123. DOES
  124. Domain Owners
  125. Draft Governance Concept
  126. DREAD
  127. Drivers
  128. DRM
  129. E-Authentication Common Services
  130. E-Business and Security
  131. E-Gov Border Control Initiative
  132. E-Gov Security Service Framework
  133. E-Government
  134. E-government Act
  135. E-government challenges, cultural barriers and stovepiped legacy systems
  136. E-government, Business Case
  137. E-government, Citizen-Centered Web services
  138. E-government, critical success factors
  139. E-government, DoJ vision
  140. E-government, drivers
  141. E-government, goes beyond IT
  142. E-government, key components
  143. E-government, principles
  144. E-government, rationale
  145. E-government, requirement for cyber security
  146. E-government, transformation attributes
  147. E-Grants Single System Solution
  148. E-Science
  149. EA
  150. EA Business Component
  151. EA Elements
  152. EA IM/IT Components
  153. EA, Benefits
  154. EA, IT security and audit resolution at GSA
  155. EA, MHS Demo
  156. EAL Level
  157. EAL2
  158. EAP data entities
  159. ebXML
  160. Eforms
  161. Egovernment, critical success factors, cooperatove engagement and conducive environment
  162. Egovernment, DoJ implementation
  163. Egovernment, DoJ on the path to green
  164. Egovernment, Lesson learned
  165. Egovernment, Quarterly Assessment for Sound Governance Structures
  166. Egovernment, transformation in how we protect and serve citizens
  167. Egrants
  168. Enforcement Management
  169. Enterprise Architecture
  170. Enterprise Architecture - an Enabler of Secure E-Government
  171. Enterprise Architecture Alignment
  172. Enterprise Architecture Bootcamp
  173. Enterprise Architecture Framework, Air Force
  174. Enterprise Architecture Framework, DoD
  175. Enterprise Architecture, alignment and governance at GSA
  176. Enterprise architecture, challenges
  177. Enterprise Architecture, challenges of crossing boundaries
  178. Enterprise Architecture, Challenges of emerging technology integration through proprietary approaches
  179. Enterprise Architecture, challenges of understanding metadata and modeling
  180. Enterprise Architecture, governance process
  181. Enterprise Architecture, GSA response to challenges
  182. Enterprise Architecture, Implementation at DoJ
  183. Enterprise Architecture, Information Management
  184. Enterprise Architecture, Integrating Role of Finance-Financial Management
  185. Enterprise Architecture, Inter-agency Information Federation
  186. Enterprise Architecture, Interoperability
  187. Enterprise Architecture, Interoperability Challenges
  188. Enterprise Architecture, IT security and audit resolution at GSA
  189. Enterprise Architecture, key to secure e-business
  190. Enterprise architecture, metadata
  191. Enterprise Architecture, metamodels
  192. Enterprise Architecture, Model driven integration
  193. Enterprise Architecture, Open Systems Interconnection Model
  194. Enterprise architecture, principles
  195. Enterprise Architecture, Strategic methodology for interoperability
  196. Enterprise architecture, templates for communications
  197. Enterprise Architecture, templates for interoperability
  198. Enterprise Architecture, Use Case
  199. Enterprise architecture, use cased
  200. Enterprise Architecture, Web services
  201. Enterprise Information Management
  202. Entreprise Architecture
  203. Envisioning
  204. Eogvernment, Progress
  205. EPA
  206. ERM Mission
  207. ETL
  208. EVA
  209. Evaluation Process
  210. Everywhere means Military Services and Defense Agencies
  211. EVM
  212. FDA
  213. FEA Challenges, Functional vs. System Performance Specifications
  214. FEA Challenges, role of EA in IT Capital Planning
  215. FEA Challenges, Scope of the “enterprise”
  216. FEA Reference Models
  217. FEA,
  218. FEA, at FAA
  219. FEA, Business Reference Model
  220. FEA, challenges
  221. FEA, Cross-agency Service Components
  222. FEA, Data Reference Model
  223. FEA, draft Performance Reference Model
  224. FEA, enabler of secure e-government
  225. FEA, Federal Aviation Admministration
  226. FEA, Federated data management approach
  227. FEA, Information Interoperability Challenges
  228. FEA, Integration of Web Services & Component Based Architecture
  229. FEA, Service Component Reference Model
  230. FEA, Technical Reference Model
  231. FEAF 2.0
  232. FEAMS
  233. Federal Aviation Administration, mission
  234. Federal data sharing, Federated data management challenges include requisite comprehension before integration efforts begin
  235. Federal data sharing, federated data management challenges to transcend black hole
  236. Federal Investigators
  237. Federal IT Investment Portfolio, FY 04
  238. Federated Data
  239. Federated Data Dictionary
  240. Federated Data Management
  241. Federated Service Information Integration Plan
  242. Feedback loop
  243. Financial Business Architecture
  244. Financial Business Process Cycle
  245. Financial Management Modernization
  246. Financial Management Modernization Program
  247. Find, Bind and Execute
  248. Firewall
  249. Firewalls
  250. First Responder Interactions, Simplify and Unify
  251. Fix FM wherever managers need data - basically everywhere
  252. FMMP
  253. Forces of Change, at FAA
  254. FSS
  255. FTS
  256. Future Medical Logistics Function
  257. Gap Analysis
  258. GEAF
  259. George Thomas
  260. George Thomas, Bio
  261. Geospatial One-Stop
  262. Global XML Web Services Architecture
  263. GOTS
  264. Governance rules
  265. Government Enterprise Architecture Framework
  266. Government Entreprise Architecture Framework
  267. Government Involvement In Standards Organizations
  268. Government Protection Profile
  269. Government Security and Privacy Direction
  270. Granularity
  271. GSA Case Study
  272. GSA-NIST XML Registry
  273. Guthrie Memo
  274. GXA
  275. Haycock, Robert
  276. Health Informatics
  277. Healthcare
  278. Healthcare, Access
  279. High Level Process and Architecture Framework
  280. Homeland Defense
  281. House Armed Services
  282. HRM
  283. HTTP
  284. IAC
  285. IAC EA SIG
  286. IAC Key Concepts
  287. IAC, business-centric methodology
  288. IAC, contact information
  289. IAC, paper on Information and Data Reference Model (DRM): Standards Based Architecture to Support Federated Data Management
  290. IAC, recommendations
  291. Identity
  292. Implementation Architectural View, Web Services
  293. Information and Data Sources
  294. Information Assurance
  295. Information Ingest and Translate
  296. Information Integration
  297. Information Routing
  298. Information, Amount
  299. Information, Complexity
  300. Infostructure
  301. Infrastructure and Knowledge Flow
  302. Infrastructure Pattern Types
  303. Infrastructure Strategy
  304. Infrastructure-level protocols for Web Services
  305. Innovators, Early Adopters and Pragmatists
  306. Integrating Security Architecture
  307. Integration Time-Boxes Releases
  308. Integration, lack of between logistic processes
  309. Internal “Red Team”
  310. International Common Criteria for Information Technology Security Evaluation
  311. International Standard
  312. Internet Data Center Reference Architecture Guide
  313. Intra Agency Information Federation
  314. IP network, preventing network attacks
  315. IP network, protection strategies
  316. IP network, risk mitigation
  317. IP network, security monitoring
  318. IP networks, chart of security incidents from CERT
  319. IP networks, design questions for establishing a secure network
  320. IP networks, industry cooperation for prevention of attacks
  321. IP networks, security and evolving threats
  322. IP networks, security issues
  323. IP networks, security through private network isolation?
  324. IRS
  325. Islands of Automation, agencies cannot easily collaborate for key missions like Homeland Security.
  326. Islands of Automation, businesses fill-out multiple forms for the same information
  327. Islands of Automation, multiple agencies to work with
  328. Islands of Automation, Strategic Alliances for Teamwork
  329. ISSE
  330. IT bought for agency operations —not citizens' interface needs.
  331. JMI
  332. John Dodd
  333. Joint Staff IT Business Process
  334. Joint Staff IT Business Process and Role of Enterprise Architecture
  335. Justice
  336. Justice Global Network
  337. Key Trends in E-government, Web services become business services
  338. Knowledge Architecture
  339. Knowledge Enablement
  340. Knowledge Technologies, Tree
  341. Kruchten, Philippe
  342. Lead Agent
  343. Lessons Learned,Simplify or Unify
  344. Line of Business Federated Data Reference Models
  345. Line of Business Management
  346. Line of Business Management Approach
  347. Linkage
  348. Local Police
  349. Location Transparent Component Implementations
  350. Logical Architectural View, Web Services
  351. Logical Business Area
  352. M3 Abstraction
  353. Mark Forman
  354. Metadata interoperability standards
  355. MHS
  356. MHS Enterprise Architecture
  357. MHS Enterprise Architecture Demo
  358. MHS Information Management Proponent Committee
  359. MHS IT
  360. MHS, Common Operating Environment Concept
  361. MHS, Enterprise Architecture Strategy
  362. MHS, Resources and Services
  363. Michael Carleton
  364. Michael Lang
  365. Microsoft Security Response Center
  366. Microsoft Solution for Intranets - Prescriptive Architecture
  367. Microsoft’s
  368. Middleware interface engine
  369. Military Health System
  370. MIME
  371. Model Driven Architecture
  372. MOF
  373. MOF models
  374. Multi-Billion Dollar Consolidation Opportunity
  375. NASCIO
  376. National Information Assurance Program
  377. Network as a Service Delivery Platform
  378. next slide.
  379. NIAP
  380. NIAP Assurance Maintenance Program
  381. NIST FIPS validation program
  382. NIST Guidance
  383. NIST Special Pub 800-23
  384. NIST/NSA CERT Program
  385. NOTE that this is different than V1.0, if you are familiar with that, which had a part 4 that contained PPs. You can now sample PPs on the web page and we’ll give that URL later.
  386. NSTISSP
  387. NSTISSP 11
  388. OMB
  389. OMB-NIST
  390. OMG
  391. OODBMS
  392. Open Services Interfaces
  393. Open Source
  394. Open Standards
  395. Organizational Integration Strategy
  396. Paradigm Shift, Web Services
  397. Part 1 presents the concepts, principles, and general model of IT security evaluations.
  398. Part 2 Annex provides detailed information and notes concerning the security functional requirements.
  399. Part 2 presents a catalog of security functional requirements.
  400. Part 3 presents a catalog of security assurance requirements and the Evaluation Assurance Levels (EALs) which define a scale for measuring assurance of IT systems.
  401. PAT interfaces
  402. Pattern of Interest
  403. Paul Clements
  404. PCM Team
  405. People
  406. Performance Indication
  407. Pilot Projects
  408. Pluggable Infrastructure Protocols
  409. POP
  410. President’s Management Agenda
  411. Privacy Architecture
  412. PRM
  413. Process Architectural View, Web Services
  414. Process Emergence of Business Service Network
  415. Product Security Target
  416. Program Executive Office
  417. Progress, Computer Security
  418. Protection Profile
  419. Protection Profiles
  420. Public Law 107-314, 2 Dec 2002
  421. Publish-Find-Bind-Execute Model
  422. QA
  423. Rap Sheet
  424. RDBMS
  425. Registry
  426. Registry, definition
  427. Registry, What’s stored inside
  428. Representing Semantics
  429. Requirements, need for revolutionary Government/Industry relationship
  430. Resistance to Change
  431. Resistance to Change, Agency cultures.
  432. Risk Assessment
  433. RM
  434. Rob Thomas
  435. Role
  436. SAML
  437. Scott Culp
  438. SECDEF is leading charge to solve the problem
  439. Secure Cyberspace
  440. Secure E-Business: AA Blueprints E-Government Solution Architecture CSF
  441. Security Analysis
  442. Security and Privacy
  443. Security and Privacy Architecture integrated with Enterprise Architecture
  444. Security Architecture
  445. Security Infrastructures
  446. Security Service Framework
  447. Security Services
  448. Security Targets
  449. Security Testing Needs
  450. Security, comprehensive
  451. Service Component Reference Model
  452. Service Oriented Architecture, 3rd generation view
  453. Service Oriented Architecture, 4th generation Application View
  454. Service Oriented Architecture, 5th generation
  455. Service Oriented Architecture, Application View 1st and 2nd generation
  456. Service Oriented Architecture, Core Concepts
  457. Service Oriented Architecture, ebXML as example
  458. Service Oriented Architecture, Network View
  459. Service Security and Privacy Framework
  460. Service Value Network
  461. Service-Oriented Architecture
  462. SMTP
  463. SOA Architects
  464. SOAP
  465. Software Architecture, Architecture Trade-offs Analysis Model
  466. Software architecture, background
  467. Software Architecture, background and ascendance
  468. Software architecture, Carnegie Mellon, Software Engineering Institute contact information and URLs
  469. Software architecture, definition
  470. Software Architecture, documentation beyond views
  471. Software Architecture, documentation for education, communication and analysis
  472. Software Architecture, documenting a view
  473. Software Architecture, documenting an architecture
  474. Software Architecture, documenting the relevant views
  475. Software Architecture, evaluation and tradeoff analysis
  476. Software Architecture, examples of prescribed views
  477. Software architecture, key to managing change
  478. Software architecture, permits/precludes achieving quality attributes
  479. Software architecture, references
  480. Software architecture, reusable model
  481. Software Architecture, Web Services
  482. Software architecture, when and why to evaluate and architecture
  483. Software Engineering Institute, who we are
  484. Software product line, definition
  485. Software product line, success and benefit/cost ration of 10:1
  486. Software product lines, economics
  487. Software product lines, examples of success
  488. SPC
  489. Special Task Force
  490. SPML
  491. SRM
  492. Standardization, lack of
  493. Standards and Interoperability
  494. Standards, access rights deficiencies
  495. Strategic Process Maturity Model Report Evolution
  496. Strong security policy and good operational procedures and document them.
  497. Support Delivery of Services
  498. SVG
  499. System Engineering
  500. System Portfolio View
  501. Systems evaluated wrongly (e.g., % time working, not program effectiveness
  502. Taxonomy of Standard-based Security Strategy
  503. TCP/IP
  504. Technology Management Initiative
  505. Technology, neither the problem nor the whole solution
  506. The Federal Enterprise Architecture (FEA)
  507. The Integrating Role of Finance-Financial Management Enterprise Architecture
  508. The point of this part of the talk is to get their hands on all the pieces. There is no real technical information given here.
  509. The scope of his vision -- and our response -- is Department-wide
  510. This addresses GAO’s past concern of lack of top-level leadership
  511. TOL
  512. Topic Maps
  513. Transforming Government, IT enabling enhanced mission accomplishment
  514. TRICARE Online
  515. TRM
  516. Trustworthy Computing
  517. Turn to page ii of Part 1. All parts have forward with list of sponsoring organizations, followed by a TOC, LOF, LOT (pgs iii - v)
  518. UBL, Data model
  519. UDDI
  520. UML
  521. Unified Security Infrastructure
  522. US Customs
  523. USDA
  524. Using the SRM to Succeed with Component-Based Architectures
  525. Vance Hitch
  526. Virtual Data Integration
  527. Virtual Optimized Clinic
  528. Virtual Query and Trigger Setting
  529. Vulnerabliity Assessments
  530. Waqa
  531. Web Service
  532. Web services
  533. Web Services Activities through multiple working groups
  534. Web Services Choreography Language Specification
  535. Web Services in the Federal Government
  536. Web Services Integration Platform
  537. Web Services Simplification
  538. Web Services, Architecture via the Web
  539. Web Services, Challenges
  540. Web Services, Definition
  541. Web Services, DoJ
  542. Web Services, Fundamentals
  543. Web Services, pilots
  544. Web Services, Rapid assembly for inter/intragovernmental services
  545. Web services, standardizing and publishing
  546. Web Services, Use Case Opportunities
  547. Web SSO Server
  548. Writing Secure Code
  549. WS-Coordination
  550. WS-Federation
  551. WS-Policy
  552. WS-Policy Attachment
  553. WS-Referral
  554. WS-Secure Conversation
  555. WS-Security
  556. WS-Transaction
  557. WS-Trust
  558. WSDL
  559. X509
  560. XACML
  561. Xforms
  562. XHTML
  563. XKMS
  564. XMI
  565. XML
  566. XML Collaborator
  567. XML Document
  568. XML Repository
  569. XML Schemas
  570. XML web services
  571. XSD