The Federal Bureau of Investigation is struggling to hire computer scientists, according to a Department of Justice audit of the feeb's attempts to implement its Next Generation Cyber Initiative.
A 34-page audit report (PDF) from the DoJ notes that, while making considerable progress, the FBI has "encountered challenges in attracting external participants to its established Cyber Task Forces".
[The audit] bemoaned how hiring and retaining qualified white hats remained a challenge for the FBI, especially when competing private-sector entities pay more and have less invasive recruitment processes. The FBI reportedly did not hire 52 of the 134 computer scientists for which it was authorised, meaning 38 per cent of the workforce it requires (as per budget) is simply not there. This additionally means that five of the FBI's 56 field offices do not have even a single computer scientist assigned to their Cyber Task Force.
Back in 2011, the Office of the Inspector General gave the FBI a thorough scolding over its inability to address America's cyber-intrusion threat, for which it has become the responsible national body. The Next Generation Cyber Initiative was launched in response, essentially as a platform for funding increases in the face of a swelling number of data breaches and cyber-attacks in recent years.
This is not the first mention of the FBI's difficulties in recruiting infosec professionals. Last year, the [FBI]'s director James Comey said the company was re-examining its drugs policy as too many applicants seemed to be enjoying a doobie en route to interview.
(Score: 1) by miljo on Monday August 03 2015, @07:13PM
This.
Who wants to help catch black hats, pedophiles, terrorists, and organized criminals on a civil servant's salary.
Now if these were computational demonologist positions, I'd take a second look. ;-)
One should strive to achieve, not sit in bitter regret.
(Score: 4, Interesting) by Anal Pumpernickel on Monday August 03 2015, @07:24PM
Rather, who wants to be the sort of scumbag who violates people's constitutional rights? I don't care how much money they offer. The FBI isn't exactly an ethical organization, so ethical individuals will avoid them.
They usually create the 'terrorists' in the first place and then set them up. As for "pedophiles", catching people who look at videos/images isn't really a good thing or effective. Organized criminals could include people who merely sell drugs. Who knows what "black hat" means, since they go after people who do the most mundane things because the rules themselves are insane. It's just appealing to people's irrational fears.