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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.
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]
NSIRA, by contrast, is mandated to review all Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities in an integrated manner, without regard for the department or agency the activities fall under. [4] This model recognizes the increasingly interconnected nature of the government's national security and intelligence activities. [2]
The National Security Act, 2017 is a Canadian statute enacted by the Parliament of Canada to reform the oversight of the National Security Agencies of Canada, including the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and the Communications Security Establishment (CSE).
National Cyber Security Centre, ... Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, United States; Canadian Centre for Cyber Security, Canada; Asia
As part of the reform process, the NCI Agency was created on 1 July 2012 through the merger of the NATO C3 Organisation, NATO Communication and Information Systems Services Agency (NCSA), NATO Consultation, Command and Control Agency (NC3A), NATO Air Command and Control System Management Agency (NACMA), and NATO Headquarters Information and ...
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.
In May 2010 a memo by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) from 2009 was released to the public that warned that cyber attacks on Canadian government, university, and industry computers was showing growth in 2009 and that the threat of cyber attacks was "one of the fastest growing and most complicated issues" facing CSIS. [1]