Ridge asks for tech help at Homeland Security
Calls upon businesses for technology innovations, better cybersecurity
Follow @infoworldRidge also called for the technology businesspeople in attendance to do more to protect the
"When it comes to security, you must be more than partners, you must be leaders," Ridge said. "We think that the lessons learned from Y2K and 9/11 should be applied and not forgotten. This will not be a cost-free arrangement, but the cost of doing little or nothing will be much higher."
A recent poll showed that about half of U.S. companies aren't backing up files, checking new employees' backgrounds, or conducting emergency drills, Ridge said, and he fears that some U.S. residents may be "lapsing into complacency" about the possibility of terrorist attacks. That study, commissioned by the
"You need to be just as worried, maybe even more worried, about somebody hacking into your system as somebody pulling up with explosives," Ridge said. "We've got some work to do."
Ridge spent much of his speech talking about the need his agency has for good technology ideas that protect
He talked about several technology initiatives at the Department of Homeland Security, including personal radiation detectors for all border agents and gamma ray scans of shipping containers at border stations, but he said more new technology ideas are needed.
He even gave an example, asking the audience if anyone had an idea for a portable device that can scan for biological, chemical, and radiological hazards, as well as explosives and guns. "If you've got one of those ... we'd be happy to talk to you about it," he said.
The technology Ridge's agency needs is either out there, or it can be created by the
Ridge asked the crowd for "good ideas and cost-effective solutions" for domestic security that can be copied across the









