Congress Proposes FISMA Overhaul

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Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


Congress Proposes FISMA Overhaul


Amendments would update the 2002 law for todays federal IT



Lawmakers have proposed amendments to the 10-year-old law that sets federal cybersecurity standards to account for changes that have since occurred in the federal IT environment.
Reps. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) and Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), the chairman and ranking member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, unveiled the
Federal Information Security Amendments Act of 2012
to overhaul the Federal Information Security Act of 2002, or FISMA.
The act--which has been
posted
online--points out that the federal IT environment has become increasingly interconnected over the last 10 years, and the security industry itself also has matured.
In light of these changes, the act calls for continuous monitoring and regular assessments of federal IT systems to ensure their security; mandates the establishment of baseline security controls for agencies as a framework for gauging the effectiveness of those controls; and gives agencies more authority to make decisions about using off-the-shelf security products in their respective IT systems, among other changes.
It also would transfer much of the oversight of agency cybersecurity away from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and back to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), a shift from the current dynamic.
[ The Obama administration also unveiled cybersecurity directives this week. See
White House Sets Cybersecurity Priorities
. ]
The OMB expanded the DHSs cybersecurity profile in 2010, and the agency has been at the forefront of much of federal cybersecurity activities since then. Indeed, the DHS and the Department of Commerces National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) currently have the lions share of overseeing agencies FISMA guidance and implementation.
Cybersecurity has been a chief concern for the Obama administration, but despite a number of proposed laws debated in Congress, lawmakers have yet to pass comprehensive legislation to protect U.S. critical infrastructure and federal networks against cyber threats.
Last May, President Obama sent a broad cybersecurity proposal to lawmakers to overhaul the nations cybersecurity laws as a way to speed the process along, and earlier this year various officials--including Obamas cybersecurity coordinator
Howard Schmidt
--also pushed lawmakers to act.
In the meantime, agencies depend on FISMA to guide them to protect federal networks. Officials already are working to integrate some of the concepts proposed by the amendment into the law. To facilitate continuous monitoring, for instance, in 2011 the DHS outlined new requirements for FISMA agencies reporting security information monthly via data feeds to
CyberScope
, an internal compliance tool.
The effort to achieve and maintain compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley requirements remains one of the primary drivers behind many IT security initiatives. In our
Security Via SOX Compliance
report, we share 10 best practices to meet SOX security-related requirements and help ensure youll pass your next compliance audit. (Free registration required.)

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Congress Proposes FISMA Overhaul