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Tech As An Accessory, Wearable – Plus the Seven Gov Stories You Need To Know

On GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

You can find all of our programs online: DorobekINSIDER.com and GovLoop Insights at http://insights.govloop.com.

But up front: The Snowden challenge — how to trust and verify

From The New York Times: Spy Chief Says Snowden Took Advantage of ‘Perfect Storm’ of Security Lapses

The Washington Post: House passes ‘clean’ debt-ceiling bill, ending two-week showdown: The House approved a year-long suspension of the nation’s debt limit Tuesday in a vote that left Republicans once again ceding control to Democrats after a collapse in support for an earlier proposal advanced by Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio). In a narrow vote, 221 to 201, just 28 Republicans joined nearly all Democrats to approve a “clean” extension of the government’s borrowing authority — one without strings attached — sending the measure to the Senate for a final vote, probably this week.

The SEVEN stories that impact your life

  1. The New York Times: Creators Still in Demand on Health Care Website – “CGI Federal took a lot of criticism for its development of HealthCare.gov, but the website’s new contractor is busy recruiting CGI employees and the Obama administration may extend the company’s role.”
  2. WSJ: Top Executive at Security-Check Firm Resigns – “A top executive at the company that performed the most recent background check of former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden resigned after he was barred by the U.S. government last week from overseeing federal business that is now the focus of a fraud investigation.”
  3. Federal Times: Lawmakers: USIS used OPM relationship to deflect scrutiny – “USIS, the federal contractor under fire for allegedly submitting hundreds of thousands of flawed background investigations to the government, used its unusual relationship with the Office of Personnel Management to cover its tracks, congressional Democrats charged Tuesday.”
  4. Federal Times: GSA to close 24 data centers – “The General Services Administration plans to close 24 data centers in fiscal 2014, according to Acting Chief Information Officer Sonny Hashmi.”
  5. Government Executive: Senate Republicans in a Box on Veterans Benefits – “Senate Democrats are determined to get a bill reversing $6 billion in controversial cuts to veterans benefits through the chamber this week without offsetting the cost. Their message: Veterans have “paid in full” their debt to the nation and shouldn’t be used as budget pawns.”
  6. AP: House approves military pension bill – “The House voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to restore full cost of living increases to pension benefits for younger military retirees, responding eagerly to election-year pressure from veterans groups.”
  7. Defense News: SOCOM Targets Boost in Procurement Investments – “US Special Operations Command is looking to boost its procurement investments as operational costs come down after more than a decade of war, its commander said.”

Before we finish up… a few items from the DorobekINSIDER water-cooler fodder… yes, we’re trying to help you make your water-cooler time better too…

Regular readers know I’m fascinated by wearables. Yesterday, at AFCEA Bethesda, where I offer up some of my favorite apps, this week I mentioned my FitBit, which has transformed how I look at exercise. And it sure seems to me that there are government implications. GovLoop’s DorobekINSIDER got an early look at the potential with Bob Gourley, the former chief technology officer for the intelligence communities. And yesterday in GovLoop’s DorobekINSIDER water cooler fodder, I mentioned that the New York Police Department is at least testing out Google Glass. Today, two additional takes on wearables:

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