First Cybersecurity Officer For W.Va. Discusses New Fellowship With Marshall University

Jaylan Mobley, the state’s first cybersecurity officer, discusses cyber security education and his new fellowship at Marshall University's Institute for Cyber Security.

Jaylan Mobley is the first West Virginia National Guard Fellow working at Marshall University at the Institute for Cyber Security, or ICS. He also serves as the state’s first cybersecurity officer, where he acts as a source of expertise in preventing cyber attacks for the West Virginia National Guard.

Reporter David Adkins spoke Mobley to find out more about his job.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Adkins: As the state’s first cybersecurity officer, how does it feel to be able to give others the opportunity to enter the cybersecurity field?

Mobley: I mean, it feels great. I’m just happy to, you know, to not only be the first, but to be able to open doors for others behind me. To be a part of everything that’s going on, because it’s new within the state, I just want to help others be a part of it. I know that cyber training is long, and is extensive, whether that’s army, or in school. I just want to be able to inspire others to want to join it within West Virginia.

Adkins: What is the curriculum for the Marshall ICS going to look like?

Mobley: This program that we’re starting at Marshall, will allow people to get a great foundation for cybersecurity, whether you’re starting from ground zero, or you’re intermediate, to have a place where you can come and build your cyber skills. Vendors from the outside will also be coming in and setting up certain competitions; the equipment will already be there. That’s what these cyber ranges will provide us: an opportunity for people to come and train and this will be big, partially for the National Guard, and for, I would say, all schools in West Virginia, because there’s going to be an effort from all sides to kind of shake hands and grow cybersecurity within the state.

Adkins: What has it been like helping out at the Institute’s foundation, and being able to help build the program?

Mobley: Marshall is trying to go in a way of cybersecurity, where many different things can be offered, whether they’re security clearances, or certifications for students, but for that to happen and for the DoD to fund that type of stuff, the curriculum needs to be a certain way. I’m going to be kind of at that foundational level because this is my first time doing it, and I kind of want to walk before I run. Personally, this is what I’ve talked to other faculty about: it’s like one thing to learn something, but it’s different to teach it. I know that this was going to help me in my professional career, to be able to convey certain things to soldiers or civilians, and to our students, so I’m just kind of thankful to have the opportunity to be a part of Marshall’s team.

Adkins: What has the cooperation between Marshall and the National Guard been like?

Mobley: I think that everybody’s on the same page. Usually, what tends to happen is, when you’re working with more than one organization, there’s always some pushback, and with this I haven’t felt any. Everybody wants us to work. Nobody is trying to get one over on the other, and that’s just kind of the beauty of it; I think if it stays that way, then it’s going to be awesome.

We’re looking for the leadership, we’re looking for career opportunities for others who want to be a part of it. The National Guard has certain things, like personnel with security clearances, different types of training, and just understanding from the DoD perspective of how everything works, and then just kind of conveying that to the university and just putting hands and minds together to say: ‘how do we do this? How do we make this work for the state? How can everybody benefit from it or win from it?’

Adkins: How important do you think is the threat of cyber attacks?

Mobley: This is something that we call open-source intelligence. Everything is kind of connected to a network, whether that’s a cell phone or a plane: anything that’s connected to the internet is connected to a network that needs to be defended, needs to be scanned, it’s really that important. We’ve seen over numerous times, different organizations/ companies being hacked, and how much of an impact it has on that company or organization. If we’re speaking from a level of one to 10, I would say, definitely a 10. This field is going to dictate the future for many people. The opportunities I feel are unlimited. People are just going to need it more so we can protect and defend against adversaries; domestic and international.

Adkins: What originally inspired you to study cyber security?

Mobley: I went to Georgia Military College and I joined a program called the Early Commissioner program, which is ECP for officers, a Junior Military College. I think there’s only four left. While I was there, I was just trying to do something that would tailor towards my Army career. So whether it was engineering, I would try to go be an engineer officer, whether it was aviation, or trying to go into the aeronautics field. Cybersecurity, or computer science, was like one of the growing things in the army, and so I said, ‘Well, you know what, I think I’m gonna take a shot at it and see what works out.’ One of the things that I loved was, every day you learn something new.

Adkins: How vital do you believe was the hands on experience you got as an intern at NASA.

Mobley: During my studies at WVU, when I was doing my undergrad, I went to a school fair, and I remember the day like it was yesterday. I was walking around, looking for a kind of junior year job, so when I graduated I would be set up, and one of the good things about the military that they kind of set you up for success, and one of the things that I knew that I kind of had an edge on was I had a security clearance. So I knew that a lot of companies were like, ‘okay, this guy’s kind of already set up for us.’ But I went up and I was talking to a guy and we were just having a conversation. I was just expressing my interest in cybersecurity, talking about certain things that I’ve learned along the way, and he mentioned NASA, and so I applied to NASA, and that was probably one of my greatest experiences there, because of the intensity that we went through as far as training.

They took us through a red phase blue phase, and into a little bit of white phase, which is offense/ defense. It was like a capture-the-satellite type simulation. I was on a blue team, pretty much our job was to defend the network to defend the satellite for two weeks. NASA already kind of has the ability to have certain equipment, certain tools, and software that you don’t normally get while you’re in school. To have that ability to get hands on to see certain things that you wouldn’t normally see was very special, and I was thankful to be a part of it because it really set me apart from my peers going into my senior year in college. Whether I’m applying to a job, or we’re in a class and we’re going over certain cybersecurity tools, and kind of already know what it’s like to use it and be able to teach it.

Adkins: What was it like balancing a career in the national guard, getting your master’s from West Virginia University, all while in the middle of a pandemic?

Mobley: Yeah, it was a bit of a challenge. I actually was dealing with three things. So, when I went off to the Basic Officer leadership course, I was doing that which is one of the toughest schools in the army. Not only that, we were dealing with COVID, and I also was getting knee surgery and at the same time that I was also doing my masters. So I was doing four or five things at once and just trying to time manage those things. One of the things I’ve learned being in the military is, leaning on others and asking others for help if you need it, and just learning to time manage along the way and learn how to not to put all your eggs in one basket. So, just to be flexible.

W.Va. Holds First High School Robotics Competition

Many of West Virginia’s Congressional delegation were in Fairmont Monday morning to commemorate the state’s first high school robotics competition.

Many of West Virginia’s Congressional delegation were in Fairmont Monday morning to commemorate the state’s first high school robotics competition.

Sens. Shelley Moore Capito and Joe Manchin, as well as Rep. Carol Miller were at Fairmont State University Monday morning to cheer on high school teams from all over the state at the first West Virginia Robotics Championship.

“I’m really excited about what we see today,” Capito said. “The teams, they’re from all over the state, but they’re also different ages, and they’re also mixed boys and girls together. Everybody can participate here and mentor one another.”

Teamwork – both between humans and between humans and robots – was a focus of the comments delivered by Morgantown-born astronaut Andrew Morgan.

“Today, you’re here as a team, and you’ll win or lose as a team,” Morgan said. “But teams are made of great team players. As astronauts, we want crewmates that are great at being team players.”

NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy was also on hand and highlighted the importance of robotics for upcoming lunar missions.

“What you’re doing today is incredibly important, because we’re going to do science differently on the surface of the moon,” Melroy said. “We think that the future of science in space is going to be human robotic teaming, meaning that you will work together with robots.”

This is the first year robotics is recognized as a high school co-curricular activity under the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission.

Mars Rover Lands With Help From Greenbank Telescope

NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover successfully touched down on the red planet yesterday. The Green Bank Telescope in Green Bank, West Virginia helped the lander stay in touch with Earth on the journey.

The telescope staff tracked Perseverance on its approach and landing on Mars and then passed the information along to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

The GBT tracked the faint communication signal transmitted by Perseverance at a frequency of just over 400 MHz. As the rover entered the Martian atmosphere the total descent, known as the Entry-Descent-Landing phase (EDL), took about seven minutes.

Referred to as the “seven minutes of terror,” Perseverance had to slow down from 12,000 miles-per-hour to just a few feet per second. This rapid change in speed generates a lot of heat, creating a shield of ionized particles around the rover, temporarily obscuring its communication signal to Earth.

To reach the surface safely, Perseverance used a heat shield to protect itself during entry, deployed a supersonic parachute to slow down, and executed the “skycrane” maneuver to slowly touch the rover down on its wheels.

While on Mars, Perseverance will collect rock and sediment samples for later return to Earth, search for signs of ancient microbial life, and pave the way for human exploration.

This is not the first time that the Green Bank Telescope has supported a NASA mission to Mars. In 2018, the telescope received direct signals from the Mars InSight Lander. The telescope was also used to support the Phoenix landing in 2008.

Spacecraft Named After Famed NASA Mathematician, W.Va. Native Katherine Johnson

A new spacecraft headed to the International Space Station later this month will be named after NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson, a native West Virginian.

“Her work at NASA quite literally launched Americans into space, and her legacy continues to inspire young black women every day,” Northrop Grumman wrote in a press release this week.

The company traditionally names each spacecraft after a person who played a pivotal role in human space flight.

Over her 33-year NASA career, Johnson’s calculations were critical to some of America’s great space achievements including John Glenn’s trip orbiting the Earth and the Apollo 11 moon landing.

“If she says they’re good, then I’m ready to go,” Glenn notably said.

Johnson, a native of White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., received a degree in mathematics and French from West Virginia State College at the age of 18. She took every math class offered at the school.

After that, she was one of three Black students chosen to integrate West Virginia’s graduate school and the first Black woman to attend graduate school at West Virginia University.

In 2015, Johnson was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama, the nation’s highest civilian honor. She passed away last year at the age of 101.

Katherine Johnson: W.Va.'s NASA Extraordinaire Dies

The West Virginia woman behind much of NASA’s 20th century space accomplishments died Monday at 101 years old. 

As an African American woman, Katherine Johnson paved the way for many black, female aerospace workers. In her 33 years at NASA, she helped calculate flight paths by hand for America’s first space mission, as well as the first moon landing. 

Johnson was the inspiration for the book and Oscar-nominated film ‘Hidden Figures.’

She grew up in White Sulphur Springs, which was at that time segregated. Black women couldn’t go to school past the eighth grade; however, Johnson finished high school by traveling 130 miles for better education.

She went on to become the point woman for space calculations in NASA’s early years. She was later awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015.

In response to her death, the West Virginia Legislature held a moment of silence Monday. After, democratic lawmakers attempted to revive the “Katherine Johnson Fair Pay Act,” a bill that would have helped West Virginia women negotiate fair and equal pay in the workforce. 

“In honor of the great West Virginian and American hero, Mrs. Katherine Johnson, who died today, I’d like to make a motion to discharge House Bill 4885, which is the Katherine Johnson Fair Pay Act, from the Judiciary Committee, which died on Friday,” Delegate Sean Hornbuckle, Cabell County Democrat, said. 

If passed, the bill would have made it an unlawful discriminatory practice for an employer to prohibit or retaliate against an employee for disclosing his or her own wages or discussing or inquiring about other employees’ wages. Additionaly, it would have limited employers’ inquiry into a job applicant’s wage and salary history.  

Hornbuckle requested the full House revive the Fair Pay Act, which was never considered in its assigned committee. 

Hornbuckle’s request failed 58 to 40. In the Senate, a similar request from Bob Beach, Monongalia County Democrat, failed 12 to 21. 

**Correction 2/24/20: A previous version did not include the extensive details of House Bill 4885. 

 

 

Remembering Katherine Johnson

In 2017, the West Virginia Legislature recognized Katherine Johnson, a female pioneer at NASA and a Presidential Medal of Freedom winner, marking April 3, 2017 as Katherine Johnson Day.  Katherine, a West Virginia Daughter, broke gender and racial barriers, she left her mark with an impressive career at NASA, she even has a lego figure named after her. 

Today, February 24, we say goodbye to Katherine Johnson and thank her for her contributions to science, engineering and for her part in inspiring those who have come after her.. 

This PBS LearningMedia resource, Katherine Johnson | NASA Computer  sheds light on her career.  The short video clip includes discussion questions and extension activities for the classroom. 

Exit mobile version