Federal officials working to craft a national cybersecurity plan to protect government and corporate computer networks from attacks kept too much of the work secret, which led to criticism from those in government and industry unable to monitor progress, the Bush administration's head of cybersecurity told Nextgov.
Greg Garcia, who was appointed assistant secretary of cybersecurity and telecommunications at the Homeland Security Department in 2006, said the Bush administration plotted out a sophisticated, interagency program that was "extraordinary." But, he added, the White House kept the Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative, which DHS designed to better protect computer networks by improving the way agencies managed information technology, too secret -- a criticism that many IT security professionals and consultants leveled at the program.
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