About: David Gewirtz

An Entity of Type: animal, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

David Allen Gewirtz is a journalist, author, and U.S. policy advisor working in technology and national security policy. He currently serves as director of the U.S. Strategic Perspective Institute. Gewirtz is a CNN contributor, a CBS contributing editor, and the ZDNet Government blogger. He is best known for his non-partisan investigative reporting on the Bush White House e-mail controversy, and the author of the book Where Have All The E-mails Gone? How Something as Seemingly Benign as White House E-mail Can Have Freaky National Security Consequences which explores the controversy from a technical perspective and, according to The Intelligence Daily, is "the definitive account about the circumstances that led to the loss of administration emails."

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • David Allen Gewirtz is a journalist, author, and U.S. policy advisor working in technology and national security policy. He currently serves as director of the U.S. Strategic Perspective Institute. Gewirtz is a CNN contributor, a CBS contributing editor, and the ZDNet Government blogger. He is best known for his non-partisan investigative reporting on the Bush White House e-mail controversy, and the author of the book Where Have All The E-mails Gone? How Something as Seemingly Benign as White House E-mail Can Have Freaky National Security Consequences which explores the controversy from a technical perspective and, according to The Intelligence Daily, is "the definitive account about the circumstances that led to the loss of administration emails." Gewirtz is the cyberwarfare advisor for the International Association for Counterterrorism & Security Professionals, a columnist for The Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security, and has been a guest commentator for the Nieman Watchdog of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University. He is also a member of the FBI InfraGard program and is a member of the U.S. Naval Institute. Gewirtz has been awarded the Sigma Xi Research Award in Engineering. He is the author of five books including How To Save Jobs and Where Have All The E-mails Gone?. He is also a former professor of computer science and has lectured at Princeton University, the University of California, Berkeley, UCLA, and Stanford. (en)
dbo:genre
dbo:thumbnail
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 17499384 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 22517 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1086424443 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:awards
  • Sigma Xi Research Award (en)
dbp:genre
  • Technology, Competitiveness, Politics, National Security (en)
dbp:name
  • David Gewirtz (en)
dbp:nationality
  • American (en)
dbp:notableworks
  • How To Save Jobs, Where Have All The E-mails Gone?, The Flexible Enterprise (en)
dbp:occupation
  • Journalist, Computer Scientist, Author, U.S. Policy Advisor (en)
dbp:spouse
  • Denise Amrich (en)
dbp:website
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbp:wordnet_type
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
schema:sameAs
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • David Allen Gewirtz is a journalist, author, and U.S. policy advisor working in technology and national security policy. He currently serves as director of the U.S. Strategic Perspective Institute. Gewirtz is a CNN contributor, a CBS contributing editor, and the ZDNet Government blogger. He is best known for his non-partisan investigative reporting on the Bush White House e-mail controversy, and the author of the book Where Have All The E-mails Gone? How Something as Seemingly Benign as White House E-mail Can Have Freaky National Security Consequences which explores the controversy from a technical perspective and, according to The Intelligence Daily, is "the definitive account about the circumstances that led to the loss of administration emails." (en)
rdfs:label
  • David Gewirtz (en)
rdfs:seeAlso
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:depiction
foaf:homepage
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
foaf:name
  • David Gewirtz (en)
is dbo:wikiPageDisambiguates of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License