The Department of Defense Inspector General (DoDIG) recently released its “Audit of the DoD’s Implementation and Oversight of the Controlled Unclassified Information [CUI] Program” (DODIG-2023-078).
The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Council issued its long awaited proposed rule on Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) on January 15, 2025. The proposed rule establishes a common form to ...
Federal government agencies produce reams of documentation, not all of which is classified, but much of which is sensitive. For decades, agencies applied their own individual markings to categorize ...
The National Institute of Standards and Technology on Thursday released draft guidance for protecting sensitive unclassified information, outlining revised cybersecurity steps for federal agencies and ...
FORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo. — Controlled Unclassified Information, or CUI, is information the government creates or possesses, or that an entity creates or possesses for or on behalf of the government. It ...
The Senate is raising questions about how the Pentagon uses a label for unclassified information that some officials say makes it more difficult to access public information. In its version of the ...
CUI is information held by or generated by the Federal Government that, while not classified, requires safeguarding and dissemination controls. This may include research data and other project ...
In March 2016, pursuant to an initial Obama Executive Order, the National Archives published its long-awaited final regulations covering how agencies must deal with controlled unclassified information ...
As federal IT supply chains increasingly depend on contractors of all sizes to store, transmit and process sensitive information, the concept of controlled unclassified information has evolved as the ...
As part of ongoing efforts to strengthen the protections for securing controlled unclassified information (CUI) in nonfederal systems, NIST has released the following drafts for comment: Special ...
(Bloomberg) -- Congress has given the Defense Department until the end of January to look into whether bureaucrats are overusing a document designation known as Controlled Unclassified Information to ...
The Department of Defense (DoD) currently conducts business with more than 350,000 contractors. Some are large companies like Raytheon, which employs over 160,000 employees, while others are small ...
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