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CyberSheath is one of the industry`s few one-stop cybersecurity compliance service providers, going beyond assessment and software licensing to solve he whole problem. We help your organization achieve and maintain full compliance with DOD requirements at the appropriate level, with a minimum amount of pain. CyberSheath staff members have been working with the DOD on DFARS-related issues since 2008, initially as a part of the Defense Industrial Base — Cyber Security Initiative (DIB-CSI). As a leader of that initiative, CyberSheath CEO Eric Noonan helped draft the first DFARS clause issued in 2013 and every subsequent update. Cybersecurity compliance is all we do. With more than 600 NIST 800-171 assessments and implementations successfully completed for DOD contractors, we can help you cut through the confusion of NIST 800-171 and guarantee complete, ongoing and fully documented compliance.
We leverage the capabilities of industry-leading commercial-off-the-shelf software, backed by trained experts to bring you cost-effective solutions with quicker deployment times, and robust support for mission-critical applications. We remove deployment and operational risks through cleared personnel.
Connect&GO is one of the only companies in the world offering simple wearble technology for your guests, backed by an intuitive operating management system for your staff.
Atlanta Computer Sales is a Alpharetta, GA-based company in the Computers and Electronics sector.
The U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit (US-CCU) is an independent, non-profit (501c3) research institute. It provides assessments of the strategic and economic consequences of possible cyber-attacks and cyber-assisted physical attacks. It also investigates the likelihood of such attacks and examines the cost-effectiveness of possible counter-measures. Although the US-CCU aims to provide credible estimates of the costs of ordinary hacker mischief and white collar crime, its primary concern is the sort of larger scale attacks that could be mounted by criminal organizations, terrorist groups, rogue corporations, and nation states. The reports and briefings the US-CCU produces are supplied directly to the government, to entire critical infrastructure industries, and to the public. The US-CCU does not do any private or commercial work. The US-CCU’s products are all made available for free. The only limitations on their release are those due to security considerations. The mission of the US-CCU is to provide America and its allies with the concepts and information necessary for making sound security decisions in a world where our physical well-being increasingly depends on cyber-security.