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Fri, Feb 19, 2010

Civil Air Patrol, USAF Junior ROTC Cyberspace Teams Headed For National Showdown

Teams Look For Vulnerabilities In Virtual Networks.

Cyber defense teams from the Arizona, California, New Hampshire and North Carolina wings of the Civil Air Patrol will compete against four Air Force Junior ROTC teams in the Air Force Association's CyberPatriot II Championships on Friday in Orlando, FL.

CyberPatriot II is the largest national high school cyber defense competition ever held. It has included more than 200 high school Air Force Junior ROTC and CAP cadet teams from 41 states and Japan in simultaneous competition. Only eight teams from the competition's Medalist Flight round advanced to the all-expenses-paid championship round at the Rosen Shingle Creek Convention Center.
 
Last year, only one CAP team was in the final eight compared with seven Air Force Junior ROTC teams. This year, CAP teams made up about one-quarter of the contestants to start, but ended the competition as half of a 50-50 split.

The CAP Medalist Flight teams are from Beach Cities Cadet Squadron 107 in Torrance, CA, Willie Composite Squadron 304 in Mesa, AZ, the Seacoast Composite Squadron in Portsmouth, NH, and the Burlington Composite Squadron in Burlington, NC Air Force Junior ROTC teams competing in the finals are from F.W. Springstead High School in Spring Hill, VA, Newburgh Free Academy in Newburgh, NY, Rome Free Academy in Rome, NY, and Clearfield High School in Clearfield, UT.

The Beach Cities cyber defense team carries a lot of momentum into the championship round of CyberPatriot II. It received the highest score in the Medalist Flight competition and easily advanced to the finals.D

uring the Medalist Flight competition, competitors had only six hours to find and correct vulnerabilities in a virtual network made possible by Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), and were tracked and scored according to success and speed. In the championship round, the cadets will compete in the most complicated series of live challenges yet, against a "Red Team" opponent that will actively counter their defense strategies using a commercial platform called CyberNEXS, donated by SAIC.

"CyberPatriot II has been a tremendous success and an excellent learning opportunity," said S. Sanford Schlitt, AFA's vice chairman of the board for aerospace education. "As a career field, cyber defense is essential to our nation's prosperity and national security. One of our primary missions at AFA is promoting education in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, and we're so proud to spearhead this exciting educational program."

FMI www.gocivilairpatrol.com

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