2020-05-04

DHS S&T awards $750K to SecuLore for Cybersecurity of Emergency Communicators

Source: SecuLore
Curated by: Gert Jan Wolf - Editor-in Chief for The Critical Communications Review

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) awarded $750,000 to SecuLore Solutions, an Odenton, Md.-based cybersecurity company, to improve and increase the resiliency of the nation’s emergency communications infrastructure, including Next Generation 911 (NG911) technologies. Through this research-and-development (R&D) project, SecuLore will use predictive analytics and collect cyber data to determine whether these resources can be used to improve the detection and elimination of cybersecurity attacks against emergency communications systems. If successful, SecuLore will add the new capability to its existing cybersecurity solutions to provide near-real-time behavioral threat analysis of the traffic hitting an emergency communications center’s network and provide recommended remediation steps that are based on the behavior and/or the type of malware. Seculore also would conduct one or more pilots with public safety agencies to help capture user feedback on their capabilities and help DHS better understand how security operations centers would deploy and manage the capability.

Robert Dew, Senior Technologist Advisor for CISA. “This project is a critical undertaking as the number of cyber-attacks continues to increase and the number of Next Generation 911 systems being deployed across the country grows."

https://www.seculore.com/press-releases