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Two Native American firms will be technical consultants on $46 million energy project Written By: Steve Gardiner | ×
The Prairie Island Indian Community s long-range plan is to be as green as possible. A $46 million appropriation from the Minnesota Legislature is a key component in projects whose ultimate goal is reaching net-zero emissions. File photo
WELCH Prairie Island Indian Community s net-zero emissions project is taking shape.
The tribe this week announced it has formed a team led by Indian Energy and Chief Strategy Group both Native American-owned companies to help create an energy system that results in net-zero emissions.
Prairie Island received a $46 million appropriation from the Minnesota Legislature in 2020 to develop and execute a comprehensive renewable energy plan that focuses on conservation, on-site renewable energy generation and sustainability initiatives.
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Two of legal’s top cybersecurity pros recount the latest, craziest cybersecurity and cybercrime stories of 2020, beginning with this week’s massive hack of U.S. government agencies.
COMPROMISED: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Treasury, State, Homeland Security, NIH and the Pentagon
Graham Cluley reported on December 15 that the United States Departments of Commerce, Treasury, State and Homeland Security, the National Institutes of Health and the Pentagon have had their networks compromised in what seems to have been a massive supply-chain attack on American government systems.
The unwitting source seems to be enterprise monitoring software company SolarWinds, which has more than 300,000 customers worldwide. In a regulatory disclosure issued December 14, SolarWinds offered limited details of what happened.
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On December 13, the software and service provider SolarWinds announced that its Orion software platform had been the target of a sophisticated cyber-attack that may have resulted in malicious code being pushed to as many as 18,000 customers. The SolarWinds software is used by many corporate and not-for-profit entities of all sizes to monitor the health of their IT networks. Although the details of this breach are still unfolding, based on the information currently available, Orion users who updated their software between March and June of this year are potentially affected.