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Oct. 10, 2023
NSA and U.S. Agencies Issue Best Practices for Open Source Software in Operational Technology Environments
The National Security Agency (NSA) is joining U.S. federal partners to release cybersecurity guidance to promote understanding of open source software (OSS) implementation and provide best practices to secure operational technology (OT) and industrial control systems (ICS) environments.
March 6, 2023
Four Years Later: The Impacts of Ghidra's Public Release
GEN Nakasone praises researchers for their "foundational work" and the "tremendous utility" Ghidra has provided to mission and the public.
March 8, 2022
Cybersecurity Speaker Series: Ghidra — Beyond the Code
The National Security Agency (NSA) Cybersecurity Collaboration Center released the fourth video in its Cybersecurity Speaker Series today, focusing on Ghidra, NSA’s open source reverse engineering tool. The Speaker Series highlights subject matter experts at NSA sharing insights, lessons, and contributions of their work in cybersecurity.
Oct. 14, 2020
NSA Announces SkillTree, an Innovative Approach to Implementing Application Training
FORT MEADE, Md. — The National Security Agency (NSA) is excited to announce the release of SkillTree, an internally-developed open source solution for gamifying user training.
April 4, 2019
Attention Ghidra Users: Full Source Code Released
NSA released the source code of Ghidra, its cybersecurity reverse engineering tool April 4.
April 20, 2018
NSA's Innovative Cyber Tool: "Unfetter" Makes Cyber Better
2018 article about NSA open source release of cybersecurity tool "Unfetter". NSA's 'Unfetter' is designed to help various industries implement better techniques for network security.
Nov. 25, 2014
NSA Releases First in Series of Software Products to Open Source Community
The National Security Agency announced today the public release of its new technology that automates data flows among multiple computer networks, even when data formats and protocols differ. The tool, called "Niagarafiles (Nifi)," could benefit the U.S. private sector in various ways. For example, commercial enterprises could use it to quickly control, manage, and analyze the flow of information from geographically dispersed sites - creating comprehensive situational awareness.