mobile technology


Cities across the country are implementing innovative parking strategies using new technologies in an effort to improve parking experiences for citizens as well as make parking fee systems more cost effective.

From California to Washington, D.C., mobile apps and other technologies are revolutionizing the parking industry. And government leaders are partnering with private industry in metropolitan areas to tailor new parking innovation to their unique needs. Keep reading →


When Susan Lawrence quit her waitressing job in her hometown of Ida Grove, Iowa, to enlist in the Army, smart phones and network-centric warfare were not part of the common vernacular.

Lawrence enlisted in what was then the Women’s Army Corps one week after her 18th birthday, specializing in home economics, typing and shorthand. Today, Lawrence is a lieutenant general and chief information officer of the Army overseeing a $10 billion information technology budget. Keep reading →


A free web chat program, a few laptops and a whole lot of motivation for harnessing the power of mobile technology to provide citizen services came together inside a Starbucks in the heart of the nation’s Capitol this week.

In all, 18 participants from 11 federal agencies, private companies and non-profits spent time Wednesday on various tasks associated with building a Mobile Gov Wiki to further the mobile government movement. In two hours, they had five new articles created and 15 articles edited on the wiki, a living web site that allows users to easily create, edit, and organize web pages. Keep reading →


FAA Mobile is an easy-to-use mobile website that provides quick access to popular FAA.gov tasks for aviation enthusiasts on-the-go. The Federal Aviation Administration developed the mobile website because they noticed an increase in mobile traffic to their website.

FAA Mobile works on a number of devices. Users can look up airport status and delays, read aviation news and the FAA’s Flight Standards District Office “lookup” allows users to opt into location services to determine the office closest to their location. In all, FAA Mobile allows the user to: Keep reading →

In addition to the usual perils it faces, the U.S. military is now grappling with a high-tech threat of a different sort: counterfeit electronic components in its equipment.

As Michele Nash-Hoff reported in The Huffington Post in November, the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) reported that an investigation had found and examined about 1,800 cases of suspected counterfeit parts in 2009-2010 alone, totaling about one million individual components.

During the SASC hearings spotlighting the threat, Senate leaders didn’t mince words:

“There’s a flood of counterfeit parts entering the defense supply chain. It is endangering our troops and costing us a fortune,” said Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich).

“We can’t tolerate the risk of a ballistic missile interceptor failing to hit its target, a helicopter pilot unable to fire his missiles, or any other mission failure because of a counterfeit part,” remarked Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz). And Brian Toohey, president of the Semiconductor Industry Association, called the issue “a ticking time bomb,” adding, “the catastrophic failure risk inherently found in counterfeit semiconductors places our citizens and military personnel in unreasonable peril.”

It is now the law that defense suppliers and the government must deploy anti-counterfeiting systems.”

With the problem set out so starkly, Congress didn’t take long to respond to the threat. On December 31, when President Obama signed the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act, a bipartisan amendment to the Act required that the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and government contractors “detect and avoid counterfeit parts in the military supply chain.”

The amendment is the toughest legal measure against counterfeiting of electronic parts to be implemented in recent memory. It is now the law that defense suppliers and the government must deploy anti-counterfeiting systems.

The Secretary of Homeland Security is now required to establish a program of enhanced inspection of electronic parts imported from any country (such as China) that is determined by the Secretary of Defense to be a significant source of counterfeit parts in the DoD supply chain. It authorizes information sharing with original equipment manufacturers, to the extent needed to determine whether an item is counterfeit.

Contractors that supply electronic parts, or systems that contain electronic parts, are now required to establish policies and procedures to eliminate counterfeit electronic parts from the defense supply chain.

Furthermore, the DoD is required to adopt policies and procedures for detecting and avoiding counterfeit parts in its own direct purchases, and for assessing and acting upon reports of counterfeit parts from DoD officials and contractors. The new law also authorizes the debarment of contractors who fail to detect and avoid counterfeit parts, or don’t exercise adequate due diligence. The law may offer tremendous savings for American taxpayers and military forces, which lose access to essential equipment when counterfeit chips invade government systems.

One cutting-edge technology-known as DNA marking-may play a key role in enforcing the law. Indeed the Defense Logistics Agency of the Defense Department has targeted DNA marking for exploration in its Directors Guidance for 2012. The DLA is presently sponsoring a pilot to test the technology.

In DNA marking, microchips–or any other component used by the military–is marked with uncopyable DNA codes, which can then be used to authenticate the originality of chips or products anywhere along the supply chain.

The technology is capable of “enhancing inspection” and forensically verifying the originality of the component in question. DNA from plants is used to create taggants to mark the product in a unique way; for example, the DNA can be added to ink that is used to print lot code.

At any node in the supply chain, a chip may be tested for the presence of the DNA marker, which can then be submitted for forensic tests to determine originality.

Botanical DNA is first harvested; the harvested DNA is then segmented and its segments are shuffled, reassembled and encrypted to form a unique, secure DNA sequence. The exact sequence is secured at a laboratory, where it is kept secret and only referred to when it becomes necessary to authenticate a specific component that had been tagged with that sequence.

Applied DNA Sciences, headquartered on Long Island, NY, sells its patent-protected DNA security solutions to protect products, brands and intellectual property from counterfeiting and diversion. One of its products is a botanical mark used to authenticate products in a unique manner that essentially cannot be copied, and provide a forensic chain of evidence that can be used to prosecute perpetrators. The company is engaged in piloting anti-counterfeiting technology currently funded by the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA), using a system that the company previously proved able to screen and block those counterfeit parts from entering the military supply system.

One academic institution announced plans last week to join Applied DNA in forging a path forward for DNA marking of microchips: The College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE) at the University of Albany. CNSE houses more than 2,600 scientists, engineers and students, who benefit from more than $12 billion invested and collaborations with more than 300 of the world’s leading semiconductor companies.

Joint research and development at CNSE’s Albany NanoTech Complex, is expected to accelerate the development of DNA marking technologies. This includes the integration of new methods for DNA deposition on nanoelectronics wafers and computer chips both prior to, and including, final packaging-to ensure the integrity and security of processed chips. When realized, these advances might enable comprehensive supply chain protection well into the foreseeable future.

With DNA marking technology responding to all of the desired features and programs of the newly enacted anti-counterfeiting legislation, the nation has a new tool in the fight against counterfeit parts that could compromise the safety and security of our armed forces.

Sebastian Thaler is a freelance science and technology writer based in New York City.

The Department of Health and Human Services has finalized an official mobile strategy and will begin implementing the plan in January, Acting CIO John Teeter announced at a presentation to federal contractors Thursday.

Teeter said the strategy was finalized Wednesday and indicates the department’s commitment to technology and progress. Keep reading →

Federal IT managers often look to leading technology suppliers to discover what they have learned to protect their own enterprises. Breaking Gov sat down with Symantec Corp.’s Vice President and General Manager for Public Sector, Gigi Schumm, to discuss what federal IT managers can learn from Symantec’s own approach to security and how those lessons are incorporated into the company’s products.

Breaking Gov: If federal IT managers wanted to look inside Symantec to see how security is managed and baked into your products, what would they see? Keep reading →

Social media tools such as Twitter and Facebook have rapidly become the organizing platforms for protest movements throughout the world.

But the BlackBerry Messenger service has proven to be the network of choice among those staying on top of the riots and looting that have gripped London in the past two days, according to a report from TechCrunch. Keep reading →


The State Department’s public diplomacy mission is constantly evolving, seeking to reach foreign audiences in new and more creative ways. And for a variety of reasons, that has increasingly meant going mobile.

Recognizing the potential of the mobile Web to reach vast audiences that are not otherwise connected to the Internet, the department’s Bureau of International Information Programs (IIP) launched m.usembassy.gov that is finding a growing following with entirely new constituencies after a little more than a year. Keep reading →

Government agencies are going mobile and learning their share of lessons. Scott Orr, mobile content editor at the State Department, has been guiding the department’s mobile website since launching it more than a year ago. And as its worldwide traffic continues to grow, he has gained a number of insights.

“Launching a mobile website is no different than launching a desktop site, it’s all about planning and developing the kind of site that is appropriate for your content and your audience,” Orr says. Keep reading →

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