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Market Segment

Federal

Think. Differently.

Knowledge is protection

Malicious cyber activity threatens the public’s safety and our national and economic security. The FBI’s cyber strategy is to impose risk and consequences on cyber adversaries. Our goal is to change the behavior of criminals and nation-states who believe they can compromise U.S. networks, steal financial and intellectual property, and put critical infrastructure at risk without facing risk themselves. To do this, we use a mix of authorities, capabilities, and partnerships to impose consequences against our cyber adversaries.

The FBI is the lead federal agency for investigating cyber attacks and intrusions. We collect and share intelligence and engage with victims while working to unmask those committing malicious cyber activities, wherever they are.

Taking the right security measures and being alert and aware when connected are key ways to prevent cyber intrusions and online crimes. Learn how to protect your computer, network, and personal information.

Business email compromise (BEC) scams exploit the fact that so many of us rely on email to conduct business—both personal and professional—and it’s one of the most financially damaging online crimes.

Identity theft happens when someone steals your personal information, like your Social Security number, and uses it to commit theft or fraud.

Ransomware is a type of malicious software, or malware, that prevents you from accessing your computer files, systems, or networks and demands you pay a ransom for their return.

Spoofing and phishing are schemes aimed at tricking you into providing sensitive information to scammers.

Depiction of banner being used in campaign to encourage the public to report Internet crime to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3).

Cyber crime is not a fair game

Overview & Areas of Concern

Our adversaries look to exploit gaps in our intelligence and information security networks. The FBI is committed to working with our federal counterparts, our foreign partners, and the private sector to close those gaps.

 

These partnerships allow us to defend networks, attribute malicious activity, sanction bad behavior, and take the fight to our adversaries overseas. The FBI fosters this team approach through unique hubs where government, industry, and academia form long-term trusted relationships to combine efforts against cyber threats.

Within government, that hub is the National Cyber Investigative Joint Task Force (NCIJTF). The FBI leads this task force of more than 30 co-located agencies from the Intelligence Community and law enforcement. The NCIJTF is organized around mission centers based on key cyber threat areas and led by senior executives from partner agencies. Through these mission centers, operations and intelligence are integrated for maximum impact against U.S. adversaries.

Only together can we achieve safety, security, and confidence in a digitally connected world.

failure is not an option

Whether through developing innovative investigative techniques, using cutting-edge analytic tools, or forging new partnerships in our communities, the FBI continues to adapt to meet the challenges posed by the evolving cyber threat.

The FBI has specially trained cyber squads in each of our 56 field offices, working hand-in-hand with interagency task force partners.

The rapid-response Cyber Action Team can deploy across the country within hours to respond to major incidents.

Cyber Security to Consider

Free Cyber Review
Compromise Assessment and Vulnerability Scan
Virtual Chief Information Security Officer
SOC Compliance.

Practice Areas

Security Monitoring/Security Operation Center (SOC) Virtual CISO (vCISO)
Security Assessment
Security Compliance Support (Audit Preparation)
CMMC Assistance
SOC 2 Type 1 & Type 2 Assistance
Digital Forensics
Security Controls Preparation (NIST / CMMC)
Security Architecture Design/Support
Security Awareness Training
Vulnerability Management
Security Policy creation

Let's discuss your specific questions & needs!

You Deserve The Best Cyber Security

over 30 years of experience

the key to success

Practice Areas

Federal agencies may be held responsible when their cyber incidents cause damage to private or other external organizations. 

Federal agencies, and supporting contractors, may need to reevaluate how they approach self-insurance by either creating appropriate set-aside funding (loss reserves) or exploring private insurance.

increase in cyber attacks on state and local governments
50%
Unauthorized access to infrastructure
85%
Operational disruptions
87%
ransomware attacks targeting public institutions has grown
65%

Although cyberattacks are conducted through technology-based means and can cause very significant damage to infrastructure, equipment, and applications, the major damage will usually be to mission and business value, not to IT assets. Cyber incident response is not primarily a technical effort.  The technical work to investigate, analyze, clean, and repair computer systems is soon overshadowed by efforts to manage citizen, customer and third-party relationships, legal matters, investment decisions, and changes in strategic course, which are significant leadership activities.​

Our goal is to help people in the best way possible. This is a basic principle in every case and cause for success. contact us today for a free consultation. 

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