Moss is a member and regular attendee of the Washington D.C. based
Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), an independent, nonpartisan membership organization,
think tank, and publisher. In 2009 Moss was sworn into the
Homeland Security Advisory Council of the
Barack Obama administration. On April 28, 2011, Jeff Moss was appointed
ICANN Chief Security Officer. In July 2012, Secretary
Janet Napolitano directed the
Homeland Security Advisory Council to form the Task Force on CyberSkills in response to the increasing demand for the best and brightest in the cybersecurity field across industry, academia and government. The Task Force, co-chaired by Jeff Moss and
Alan Paller, conducted extensive interviews with experts from government, the private sector, and academia in developing its recommendations to grow the advanced technical skills of the
DHS cybersecurity workforce and expand the national pipeline of men and women with these cybersecurity skills. On October 1, the
HSAC unanimously approved sending the Task Force recommendations to the Secretary. In October 2013, Jeff announced that he would be stepping down from his position at
ICANN at the end of 2013. In 2013, Jeff was appointed as a Nonresident Senior Fellow at the
Atlantic Council, associated with the Cyber Statecraft Initiative, within the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security. In 2014, Jeff joined the
Georgetown University School of Law School Cybersecurity Advisory Committee. 18 March 2016,
Richemont announced his nomination for election to the board of directors. In 2017, Jeff was named a Commissioner at the
Global Commission on the Stability of Cyberspace (GCSC). The GCSC is composed of 24 prominent
independent Commissioners representing a wide range of geographic regions as well as government, industry, technical and civil society stakeholders with legitimacy to speak on different aspects of cyberspace. The commission's stated aim is to develop proposals for norms and policies to enhance international security and stability and guide responsible state and non-state behavior in cyberspace. In 2017, Jeff spearheaded the creation of the DEF CON Voting Machine Village. Debuting at DEF CON 25, the Voting Machine Village allowed hackers to test the security of electronic voting machines, including several models still in active use in the US. The machines were all compromised over the course of the conference by DEF CON attendees, some within hours of the village's opening. The resulting media coverage of the vulnerability of all tested machines sparked a national conversation and inspired legislation in
Virginia. In September 2017, the Voting Machine Village produced "DEF CON 25 Voting Machine Hacking Village: Report on Cyber Vulnerabilities in US Election Equipment, Databases and Infrastructure" summarizing its findings. The findings were publicly released at an event sponsored by the
Atlantic Council and the paper went on to win an
O'Reilly Defender Research Award. In March 2018, the DEF CON Voting Machine Hacking Village was awarded a Cybersecurity Excellence Award. The award cites both the spurring of a national dialog around securing the US election system and the release of the nation's first cybersecurity election plan. In December 2021, Moss was appointed as one of twenty-three members of a newly formed
US DHS CISA cybersecurity advisory council. Other notable members include
Alex Stamos,
Steve Adler,
Bobby Chesney,
Thomas Fanning,
Vijaya Gadde,
Patrick Gallagher, and
Alicia Tate-Nadeau. ==Current position==