State Department CIO Interviewed About Post-Wikileaks Changes 24
CowboyRobot writes, quoting Information Week: "Eighteen months after its diplomatic cables were exposed in the WikiLeaks breach, the State Department continues to lock down its confidential information, while increasing its use of using social media. The agency is deploying new security technology, including auditing and monitoring tools that detect anomalous activity on the State Department's classified networks and systems. State has also begun tagging information with metadata to enable role-based access to those who need it, and is planning to implement public key infrastructure on its classified systems by the summer of 2014. This is all taking place despite the recent announcement that the IT budget will be cut by nearly 5%."
Shutting the Barn Door (Score:2)
So, this means that they had almost no security measures aside from the basics when the leaks took place.
I suppose its not that surprising that it takes a breach of some magnitude in order to bring in change.
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Re:Shutting the Barn Door (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, he probably should have specified the unspoken ellipses there--i.e. ...
"We want Federal agencies to begin sharing as much data as they can. ...With each other... "
In all fairness, SECDEF probably assumed the people he was talking to were competent enough to fill in the blanks (you know, the part about not revealing the data to the Chinese mafia, for example.) Obviously, that assumption was a mistake.
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use of using? (Score:2)
Really?
Been working at the department of redundancy department long?
Would this stuff had helped? (Score:4, Insightful)
At the end of the day, Bradley Manning was a mental trainwreck in a myriad of ways. This wasn't a secret -- he was in the process of being drummed out of the military before his arrest. Seems to me that the human half of the system failed -- someone in Manning's state of crisis should have been cutoff from access to weapons or critical information at some point.
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I guess Bradleys state was kind of normal for the army: SNAFU.
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You assume that information was critical. From what I've heard it was on a central repository that a few hundred thousand government employees had access to. It wasn't a place for really secret stuff, and it's likely that most major powers already had those files. The only damage done was that the public got to know about them.
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The only damage done was that the public got to know about them.
This is the angle that so few people in our country seem to get... Nothing that Manning released was really all that "critical" to fighting a war. It was critical, however, in exposing the government's bottomless bucket of lies on the subject. So, obviously, Manning must die.
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yep. the people who attacked manning were whom exactly? the folks who generate the propaganda.
Of course they are and were pissed, not for a good reason though.
Re:Would this stuff had helped? (Score:4, Interesting)
You have hit the nail on the head
Many security breaches can be prevented if we just follow the guidelines that are in place. If you look at the case of Sub-Lieutenant Jeffrey Delisle [www.cbc.ca] there were some indicators [nationalpost.com] such as his divorce and bankruptcy which are red flags.
In Delisle's case he was caught, but it is not clear how much info he sold.
Yet a third case of Security Officials dropping the ball is John Walker [wikipedia.org] who I believe was turned in by his wife. This guy at one point didn't even try to keep his clearance updated!
So, in the end it falls to the procedures we have in place. If we don't consistently follow them, we pay the consequences.
Long story short... (Score:2)
I could be oversimplifying this though...
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Their entire problem was too many secrets ... (Score:3)
What Manning did is not really a huge crime, he just distributed some stuff that he had very easy access to. The only reason it is a big deal is the negligence that meant he had access to enough to cause embarrassment and so we get the disproportionate response of "might makes right" that belongs more in China than in a State that respects the rule of law. He's leaked information that the Secretary of State is unfit for the position due to little respect for the rule of law (directing agents to get credit card numbers of diplomats), so it's probably to be expected if disappointing.