National Security Jobs To Rival Silicon Valley Over the Next 10 Years?
AHuxley writes "The Capital reports on a new cyber curriculum at a Maryland high school to feed the ever growing needs of the NSA and Cyber Command. A quote from Dutch Ruppersberger (D-MD) about job growth in the local national security sector stands out: '... in 10 years, there are going to be more tech jobs than Silicon Valley.' Could the new funding for the expansion of the National Security Agency and the Army's new Cyber Command be the next big growth area for the US?"
cause i live here
Getting citizens excited about spying on each other.. Great.. Just a natural extension of BigBrother TV shows where we "spy" on house inhabitants, etc. etc.
Does anyone else think this whole "cyber" thing has gotten out of hand? Someone needs to tell them that if they want to be taken seriously, they shouldn't use such a buzzword.
Why do a whole curriculum? The only steps should be:
1. Remove all mission critical systems from the internet.
2. Remove all other systems that do not require the internet from the internet.
3. Do not allow employees to take their non-internet laptops and use the internet from home.
4. Do not allow employees to use removable media.
5. Preferably use a thin client setup so that the machines can more easily be secured.
We do realize that national security "jobs" do not produce anything, don't we?
Sooner or later everyone's working for the man.
If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear. Oh, but lets execute all members of wikileaks.
Growth increases national wealth. Security expenditures never do that. At best they consume a portion of the national wealth in order to protect the remainder from enemies. These, of course, won't even do that.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
No, national security jobs do not produce goods or services. If they're next big thing, they'll probably be the last big thing too.
would there be more govt jobs than private sector jobs?
Go for it kids! They can't off-shore those jobs. And when you get tired of work'in for the Government, you can go and become a private consultant and make bucks!!!
If the industry protecting our electronic assets is larger than the industry creating said assets, doesn't that raise a red flag that maybe we're doing something wrong in implementation?
The Cyber Command is not under the Army. Originally it was a part of the Air Forces' Space Command but has since migrated to a Joint Command. Think thats about all I'm allowed to say about it though...
Is there any one out there who is enjoying their cyber command job? And why?
In a healthy society, more people produce wealth than consume or protect it.
The NSA's job is - in broad strokes - to consume some wealth in order to protect the rest. As the government grows larger than the private sector, the society's economic underpinnings come undone.
I hate to say it - because some of their supporters and members are just plain morons spouting Fox-news propaganda - but the Tea Party people do have a point. Government is too big in the US.
I'm surprised you haven't been subjected to redicule for your title yet.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
This is ridiculous, what is happening is the real work needed is not being done.
The sign is Two main issues:
1. America need real employment.
2. Software Development needs to be fixed. that there are no jobs in the US if it has gotten to the point were all the jobs are from the Government and this Cyber Warfare is what every learning organization is trying to get people with. This shows the whole Cyber Warfare and Information Security has matured and there are no more jobs.
Solution:
First fix K Street and limit its power of influence.
Eliminate the High ROI on Financial markets. They can only ROI from direct business investments.
Focus on employment where, when unemployed will create work which an item can be exported. That is create products.
Fun is they are making work for them selves. All those who for one reason or another do not get employment will be the ones who employ those who do. Just like Layers and Attorneys and what they do when they do not have work.
The Cyber Command is a joint unified command. Each branch has components that make it up, it's not just the Army.
Considering that it's going to be a series of high school classes ... it doesn't matter because this is nothing more than a photo op. Politicians showing that they're "doing something" about "the threat".
The problem is NOT that we don't have people who understand security.
The problem is that those people's BOSSES do not care about security until AFTER someone cracks their systems.
Half the teachers are fsck ups thanks to the equal opportunity laws and women's liberation. Only a person who wants job security and not much else becomes a teacher (in short a loser). Half the people that are black only got jobs because they are black and perhaps big dicks. Most breeders (read parents) have absconded their responsibilities has parents and blame the teachers because their kids don't study. Hey breeders you can't handle kids maybe you should think before you open your legs? We have become a 3rd world country. Bread and circuses [Mcdonalds and cable TV]. A nation of fsck ups.
I worked for a spook house. Couldn't tell anyone anything about what I did. Couldn't talk to co-workers on the bus. I suppose it kind of forces you to separate your home life from your work life. Pay is about average. If you work for Google or other tech places, you get paid more. They tried to make it slightly more Google-ish (low prices for soda drinks, low prices for snacks). Tough to get a reference out of them if you go to work somewhere else though: "oh, we can't tell you if someone did or didn't work here...". Quite frankly, I'm happier working outside, rather than inside. I don't have anyone looking over my shoulder all the time, and I don't have to worry about what I say all the time.
Yours Sincerely,
Anonymous Coward.
I had a DARPA contract during my tenure at Pixar, before we got our first film contract. The purpose was to create economic demand for computer graphics hardware by making new advances in image-processing software, so that the U.S. would have that technology if it needed it for wartime. So, it ended up making live-action and old cel animated films look better, but served the economic purpose desired by DoD.
Bruce Perens.
...military dictatorship as the American Way into the future (Starship Troopers style), then yes.
Here's hoping the Internet will rather make the people(s) call in unison for democratic ways and peaceful international relations.
> Could the new funding for the expansion of the National Security Agency and the Army's new Cyber Command be the next big growth area for the US?"
So, the Government takes a boatload of tax money from people and spends it on programmers.
This is not growth. No wealth is being created.
Indeed, wealth is being consumed. The larger this sector becomes, the less growth there will be.
The problem I see here is, that whereas Silly Valley jobs create wealth (and knowledge, infrastructure, etc) for the nation, defense jobs only consume wealth. Maybe that's part of the plan, tho... If we bankrupt the country with lavish expenditure on an oppressive security apparatus, we may just get rid of all our enemies. We'll no longer have wealth for anyone to envy, global influence for anyone to resent, or freedom for anyone to hate. Good plan, right?
...I feel less secure. It's probably just me.
While there are certainly exceptions, the economics of IT spending make it fairly likely that at least a substantial minority of the available geek talent will be eating right out of the state's hand.
Jobs requiring security clearances(whether directly on the federal payroll, or as one of the legions of subcontracted spooks) are some of the few that are resistant to the ideological free-trade enthusiasts, H1Bs, and assorted other economic and political forces that have been chipping away at the real income of ~the bottom 90% of Americans for a few decades now.
As long as the DoD budget holds out(and it will probably be among the last to go), there will be a fairly powerful incentive among those with the requisite computer skills to keep their mouths shut and keep plugging away at the electronic surveillance state...
No chance of becoming independently wealth, just quite literally a long term government job, with little real chance of advancement.
No thank you.
how good is the curriculum? book based or based on real world systems?
How much B.S will be in the jobs? will it be tell people over and over to update the old app that is easy to hack? Tell others that you need to move to system X?
A lot of Security holes come from old apps and over locked down systems that are by passed to get work down other then waiting for paper work to get the lock down set in the right way.
Will the jobs be good and paper work mess where you can't do any real work with out braking a law.
to India.
Read the book, if you don't want to sound like a fool to anyone who knows anything about Heinlein.
end this nonsense. begin a new era of different nonsense!
If they're going for high school, it means they need stupid people, which'll yield up disaster eventually.
NSA salaries aren't too shabby but they're slightly lower than equivalent level jobs in private industry, well government jobs offer better benefits, right?
Wrong. All the much vaunted retirement benefits offered by state governments are rapidly being rescinded. I'd imagine federal jobs will soon follow. If Republicans can gut the VA, then NSAs benefits political are toast.
If your taking a government job, please help all your fellow government employees by insisting upon a salary that's on-par with industry. In particular, you should apply for industry jobs every now & again, seeing if you get offered a significant raise.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
One big thing that will be missing: cultural diversity. SV attracts a lot of people because it is one of the (few) places in America that is richly culturally diverse. NSA jobs are, by law, all US citizens - and in practice, 99% are filled by white males.
There are 5 Federal Jobs in IT for every private industry job. It has been this way for 2 years. It was about 50/50 in years previous- but not anymore. Jobserve.us or usajobs.com or even Monster.com- take a tour and find out.
There was an article (mentioned here on slashdot?) that debunked the common story it was visionaries like Hewlett, Packard, Noyce, Moore and others that created Silicon Valley. Which they did but at government expense, back in those early days (1950s, 1960s) 80% of semiconductor sales were to military. Somewhat hard to believe but it makes sense with DOD spending on "space age" electronics plus all the subcontractors and other companies to support the big boys. So.... with ever increasing spending on national security with Maryland being in the center... become the new Silicon Valley? But here's the wildcard: Outsourcing to China nowadays. Back in 1950s and 60s, everything was done here so many people of all walks of life can get in on the action (i.e. Solder Ladies). And whatever computers you buy, most certain there are no "Cylon Kill Switches" built inside.
mfwright@batnet.com
Contrary to the music industry, the military-industrial complex does seem to adapt.
On the downside, this stuff is even more overhead and even less productive in and of itself. That means a further hollowing of the economy and a net loss of wealth, especially when also accounting for the inevitable loss through further erosion of civil liberties. Great for the individual future governmental TLAgency employee, though. In that much this high school is spot on.
I have a good idea where the federal budget could be cut....
China's GDP is around 1/3rd of the USA GDP. The only economy with a comparable amount of output (GDP) is the eurozone [actually a little higher than USA]
The only way china will "overtake" the usa economy is if it grows at a tremendous pace (remember 10% growth in china is like 3.3% growth in USA) for a tremendous period of time.
Assuming long term exponential growth is rarely a good assumption. (see recent housing crisis in USA)
I don't want to be at a place where the Indians eat lunch together, the Chinese eat lunch together, and the few remaining people feel like outsiders in their own country.
I also like being able to reliably tell when somebody is pleased, pissed off, joking, or whatever. I can't do that very well across cultures.
Gee, it's the same as when you join any decent-sized corporation. I'm not seeing a difference.
Joining a start-up, or even founding one, rarely works out better. Normally it's worse. At the end, your paycheck goes missing.
Your IPO dreams are like the dreams of a high school kid who wants to be a movie star, pop star, or sports star. In theory it could happen. You could also win the lottery. Are you going to grow old chasing start-up hopes, or are you going to do the rational thing?
It might not be "creation" of wealth, but prevention of wealth destruction is real. How much would it cost for the nation's banks or stock markets to go down for even one day? Then factor in the overall lost deals and reputation over the future. That's what preventing it is worth.
Spending some of our gold to hire guards to guard our giant pile of gold isn't a complete waste of gold. The guards may not make the pile bigger, but they help prevent it from getting massively smaller. And you're naive if you think there's no one would like to make the pile a lot smaller.
I can't say anything about the Cyber Command except that it is active duty military and thus probably horrible. There is much more to cyberwar than the military though.
I'm with a contractor. I get paid well. I get paid even more if I work overtime. I enjoy helping the USA. The ongoing situation is fierce, exciting, and (when we win) really satisfying.
The real government jobs are similar. You get less pay, cooler toys, more insider info, a seat closer to the action, a less flexible schedule, and more job security.
Then there'll be nothing in the U.S. to CyberProtect - anything worthwhile will be in China or India.
Stop the madness on this endless homeland security expansion. Companies can take care of themselves.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
As the requirements for most of those positions is a Security + cerification. Even a CISSP is a dime a dozen now thanks to DOD 8570; you can assume that the hysteria will be growing.
Most of these people can't turn on a computer or operate a console application and somehow they are going to contribute to a sensible security solution.
So I don't know what's worse with the growing hysteria. The number of snake oil salesmen at security companies who will be fleecing the government with their wares; or the "security professionals" who will be fleecing the government for all these crazy positions that will be created....
You spew a racist diatribe but self-censor the word 'fuck'? Or are you actually trying to convey that the teachers' filesystems may have been corrupted because they lost power suddenly?
,,,it must be time for a new government.
Anybody care to compute the ratio of terrorists to terrorist hunters?
But hey, if you can't find 'em, make 'em.
The US regime is bankrupt. It won't be able to afford to employee these people by the time they graduate.
Absolutely; we are spending until our credit card with China and other developing nations is maxed out. I was hoping that Mr. Obama would fix the mess that Mr. Bush got us into; guess I was wrong. Mr. Obama, where are the taxes on the rich you promised? What ever happened to "too big to fail is too big to exist"? Our government likes to add the prefix "Cyber" to anything that has to do with technology. Maybe I should just hang out drinking my Cyber-coffee using my Cyber-macbook, and finish doing my Cyber-tax return.
I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
Why don't you just burn the money - after all, you can always just print some more when you need it.
Anyone who had worked in IT has heard this. Why do we need IT?
Long before then the budget crisis will have gutted most government services, especially the ones that actually benefit the people. Silicon valley jobs will be much safer than government jobs, unless the governmants tax them to death, or offshore. High tech jobs at companies headquartered offshore will be your best bet I'm afraid.
Now all the bright young tech minds have to work for the national security state, rather than the real economy. It's losing game. The Soviets devolved to this just before they crumbled. When we crumble, I only hope we do it as peacefully as they did.
Does anyone else living in the area kind of get the vibe that we're in a government-fueled, tech bubble?
The area is glutted with IT and security professionals; anyone with a computer science degree is heavily recruited by contractors; dinner parties are awkward - whenever the subject of work comes up, EVERYONE gets silent because EVERYONE has Top Secret security clearance; home prices in the city remained high and going up contrary to the rest of the country; online schools like UMUC are constantly advertising for "Cyber Security Warriors!!!!"
Government workers are almost becoming their own economic class here, while anyone not working for the government is struggling like the rest of America. It's like the DC, Maryland, Northern Virginia area is in some kind of alternate universe. Even after the government announced that they would be significantly cutting back on the amount of contractors they allow, nobody was worried and tons of jobs are still available.
Welcome in the ever growing militarist America. First it was WWII, the Cold War, Korean War, Vietnam War, Gulf War, War on Terrorism and now the Cyberwar. See also Wikipedia for a more complete list. Ask your self why the budget for the military is continuing to rise year after year and never returns down even to the level at the Cold War. Ask your self why America continuing to have a standing army of no less then 1,4 Million active personnel and another 1,4 Million in reserve.
For further reverence please read The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic
http://www.mueller-public.de - My site http://www.anr-institute.com/ - Advanced Natural Research Institute
A common idea in these comments is that new government jobs in cybersecurity will be useless and unproductive. I find that far too optimistic. These people aren't being hired to do anything productive, but they are being hired for a reason. And that reason is the long-awaited and nascent government takeover of the Internet.
Have you ever seen a booby-trapped iceberg from a distance? Well, don't blink, because we've got a full head of steam.
See, the problem for regulators is that there's nothing wrong with the Internet. It works. It's cheap. It's free. Everybody loves it. A grim sight indeed for people who get their money and influence and jollies from regulating things. Faced with this, regulators have two options for staying relevant:
1) Make trouble.
2) Make trouble up.
The second option has been tried. But even the seemingly boundless mandate of "homeland security" isn't enough to alter the underlying structure of the Internet--which is sensible, equitable and self-healing--to something more suitable for bureaucrats and lobbyists.
So now they're stoking the engine: it's time to make trouble. A current bill in Congress would establish a national Internet blacklist. Worse, the FCC is asserting power to regulate ISPs. By introducing arbitrary rules, paperwork, and vague incentives, the FCC could make the Internet work less efficiently. Once access is rendered less fair by incentives and the ability to self-regulate is hampered by red-tape, people will gradually grow dissatisfied, and most will blame their ISPs. Then, our heroes, the government will swoop in to save the day! There'll be power and graft for all.
The political adage "never waste a crisis" is only half right. Sometimes you have to bring the iceberg to you. This federal buildup in tech jobs is not merely wasteful busywork. It may very well be the beginning of the end of the free Internet.