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Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is the U.S. Department of Homeland Security agency for reducing cyber and physical risks to critical infrastructure and federal civilian networks. Created by the 2018 CISA Act, it works with government and industry, publishes alerts and guidance, and coordinates assistance during significant incidents. Its direct federal-network role chiefly covers the Federal Civilian Executive Branch, including .gov; private-sector engagement is often voluntary or sector-specific.

Practitioners use CISA advisories and the Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog to prioritize patching where exploitation has been observed, and consult applicable directives and incident-response guidance. CISA supports vulnerability reporting and promotes controls such as multifactor authentication, logging, and tested recovery. A CISA alert is an actionable risk signal, not proof every organization is affected; teams should verify product, version, exposure, and obligations.

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Bank Info Security 1 year, 1 month ago

'There Will Be Pain': CISA Cuts Spark Bipartisan Concerns

Analysis of Proposed Budget, Workforce Cuts Reveal Risks to Cyber ReadinessThe Trump administration’s 2026 budget proposal would eliminate over 1,000 positions and nearly $425 million from CISA, gutting cyber ops, risk modeling and election security - prompting warnings that the U.S. is weakening its national cyber defense amid rising global threats.

DHS Budget Proposal Reduces CISA’s Operational Core Amid Growing Global ThreatsThe Trump administration’s 2026 Homeland Security Department budget would cut $500 million from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, eliminating over a third of its staff and gutting key programs central to federal cybersecurity and private sector engagement efforts.