The first organization of its kind, the CERT/CC was created in
Pittsburgh in November 1988 at
DARPA's direction in response to the
Morris worm incident. The CERT/CC is now part of the CERT Division of the Software Engineering Institute, which has more than 150 cybersecurity professionals working on projects that take a proactive approach to securing systems. The CERT Program partners with government, industry, law enforcement, and academia to develop advanced methods and technologies to counter large-scale, sophisticated cyber threats. The CERT Program is part of the
Software Engineering Institute (SEI), a federally funded research and development center (
FFRDC) at
Carnegie Mellon University's main campus in Pittsburgh. CERT is a registered trademark of Carnegie Mellon University.
Confusion with US-CERT and other CERTs In 2003, the
Department of Homeland Security entered into an agreement with Carnegie Mellon University to create
US-CERT. US-CERT is the national computer security incident response team (
CSIRT) for the United States of America. This cooperation often causes confusion between the CERT/CC and US-CERT. While related, the two organizations are distinct entities. In general, US-CERT handles cases that concern US national security, whereas CERT/CC handles more general cases, often internationally. The CERT/CC coordinates information with US-CERT and other computer security incident response teams, some of which are licensed to use the name "CERT". While these organizations license the "CERT" name from Carnegie Mellon University, these organizations are independent entities established in their own countries and are not operated by the CERT/CC. The CERT/CC established
FIRST, an organization promoting cooperation and information exchange between the various National CERTs and private
product security incident response teams (PSIRTs). ==Capabilities==