Howard Schmidt returns to government

By Ted Bridis, The Associated Press Oct 6 2004 4:52PM
http://www.securityfocus.com/printable/news/9660

Howard Schmidt, a highly regarded technology executive who was former
special adviser to President Bush for cybersecurity, is returning to work
with the Homeland Security Department on efforts to protect the nation's
computer networks.

Schmidt, the chief security officer for eBay Inc., will be named chairman of
the U.S. Computer Emergency Response Team, an organization jointly run by
the Homeland Security Department and private technology groups, including
Carnegie Mellon University. He will work with the technology industry on
U.S. cybersecurity policies.

The announcement was expected Monday in San Francisco, according to
officials who met Wednesday for a briefing about the announcement with
Schmidt and Robert Liscouski, an assistant secretary at the Homeland
Security Department. The officials spoke only on condition of anonymity,
noting the DHS announcement was next week.

Schmidt, who will be paid through Carnegie Mellon as a government
contractor, was expected to remain at eBay. As Bush's former special
adviser, Schmidt helped create the administration's "National Strategy to
Secure Cyberspace," a set of dozens of recommendations to better protect
computer networks.

"It's great he's willing to come back to public service," said Harris
Miller, head of the Information Technology Association of America, a leading
trade group.

Last week, the Bush administration's top U.S. cybersecurity official, Amit
Yoran, resigned abruptly as director of the National Cyber Security Division
within DHS. The office to be headed by Schmidt is the operational arm of
that division, which has an $80 million budget and 60 employees.

Liscouski has appointed Donald A. "Andy" Purdy, Yoran's former deputy, as
acting director of the division. In an e-mail from Liscouski to DHS
employees obtained by The Associated Press, Lisouski said Purdy was "highly
regarded for his technical expertise and is well-known to the cyber
community both in the private and government sectors."

Schmidt declined to comment when contacted by the AP, referring inquires to
DHS.

Schmidt formerly was chief security officer at Microsoft Corp. before coming
to work for the White House. He succeeded Richard Clarke, a former senior
counterterrorism adviser to President Bush who quit and wrote a book
containing scathing criticisms of the administration's response to
terrorism.



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