Homeland security is an American national security term for 'the national effort to ensure a homeland that is safe, secure, and resilient against terrorism and other hazards where American interests, aspirations, and ways of life can thrive' to the 'national effort to prevent terrorist attacks within the United States, reduce the vulnerability of the U.S. To terrorism, and minimize the damage. The Department of Homeland Security works to improve the security of the United States. The Department's work includes customs, border, and immigration enforcement, emergency response to natural and manmade disasters, antiterrorism work, and cybersecurity. The Homeland Security Specialist. With the onset of terrorism and heightened threats both at home and abroad, Homeland Security is a growing, increasingly complex field within the Criminal Justice field. Homeland security professionals address key functions of threat prevention, crisis response, and operations recovery.
These data provide a window into how people are interacting with the government online. The data come from a unified Google Analytics account for U.S. federal government agencies known as the Digital Analytics Program. This program helps government agencies understand how people find, access, and use government services online. The program does not track individuals, and anonymizes the IP addresses of visitors.
Not every government website is represented in these data. Currently, the Digital Analytics Program collects web traffic from around 400 executive branch government domains, across about 5,700 total websites, including every cabinet department. We continue to pursue and add more sites frequently; to add your site, email the Digital Analytics Program.
You can download the data here. Available in JSON and CSV format.
Additionally, you can access data via our API project (currently in Beta).
Due to varying Google Analytics API sampling thresholds and the sheer volume of data in this project, some non-realtime reports may be subject to sampling. The data are intended to represent trends and numbers may not be precise.