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The Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (CCCS or Cyber Centre; French: Centre Canadien pour la Cyber Sécurité) is the Government of Canada authority responsible for monitoring threats, protecting national critical infrastructure against cyber incidents, and coordinating the national response to any incidents related to cyber security.
The act replaces certain key oversight bodies, and expands oversight to include a new Agency that reviews the actions taken on behalf of the Government of Canada by its national security agencies, as well as an Officer of Parliament that has quasi-judicial authority to review such actions, and make a report to the Prime Minister and Parliament.
Scott Jones is a Canadian official, who was appointed to head a cyber security agency, in 2018. [1] His agency, the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security, will have 750 individuals in 2019. [2] Jones has Bachelor's degrees in Computer Science and Electronic Systems Engineering, and a Masters in Business Administration. [1]
The Canadian Armed Forces Cyber Command was formed on 26 September 2024. [2] Major-General Dave Yarker was appointed as the commanding officer of CADCYBERCOM. [ 3 ] According to the Canadian military, CAFCYBERCOM is responsible for cyber operations, cyber force sustainment, management, and development. [ 4 ]
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The Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS, / ˈ s iː s ɪ s /; French: Service canadien du renseignement de sécurité, SCRS) is a foreign intelligence service and security agency of the federal government of Canada.
Public Safety Canada (PSC; French: Sécurité publique Canada, SPC; PSP), legally incorporated as the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness (PSEPC), is the department of the Government of Canada responsible for (most) matters of public safety, emergency management, national security, and emergency preparedness in Canada.
The Director NCSA should be accountable to the NC3 Board for executing the Agency's general policy decisions, directives and strategy, and for the provision of CIS services to all its "customers". Under these guidelines the NCSA was designed and it formally took over responsibility from the decommissioned NACOSA on 1 August 2004.