Wikileaks is a major security threat

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The following is from a classified US intelligence document regarding Wikileaks:

(S//NF) Wikileaks.org, a publicly accessible Internet Web site, represents a potential force
protection, counterintelligence, operational security (OPSEC), and information security
(INFOSEC) threat to the US Army. The intentional or unintentional leaking and posting of US
Army sensitive or classified information to Wikileaks.org could result in increased threats to
DoD personnel, equipment, facilities, or installations. The leakage of sensitive and classified
DoD information also calls attention to the insider threat, when a person or persons motivated by
a particular cause or issue wittingly provides information to domestic or foreign personnel or
organizations to be published by the news media or on the Internet. Such information could be of
value to foreign intelligence and security services (FISS), foreign military forces, foreign
insurgents, and foreign terrorist groups for collecting information or for planning attacks against
US force, both within the United States and abroad.

The rest of the document is here. The story about this document, and the leak of the document about Wikileaks, is HERE, on Wikileaks.

My source for this is …. classified.

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8 thoughts on “Wikileaks is a major security threat

  1. This is complete BS. By the time wikileaks gets it and makes it public, it is not at all a secret.

    When wikileaks publishes it, at least the US government knows that it has been compromised and can take corrective action.

    Without wikileaks they are just fat dumb and happy while the actual evil-doers use that information in secret.

  2. That’s some bullshit classification for that document. SECRET my ass. I’m having a little trouble believing it was actually classified, but the fact that it was marked so properly and thoroughly leaves the possibility that it’s real. If it was faked, whoever faked it knew what they were doing. Perhaps it was classified in order to make someone feel important.

    You see, storing and maintaining (and ultimately destroying) classified information is expensive. Damn expensive. So you don’t go around calling things classified SECRET on a whim (though, when in doubt, better to be safe than sorry). It’s only supposed to be for information that “when compromised might reasonably cause serious injury to the national interest.” Absolutely, nothing in that document fits that definition by a long shot.

    Take that classified quote you used. That’s all common knowledge for anyone familiar with Wikileaks. It’s just stating facts that could be found on Wikipedia.

  3. @daedalus2u: But the managers love being dumb and happy – remember how Richard Feynman’s security concerns were addressed: keep Feynman out of the area. It’s all about pretending there is no threat, then blaming other people when problems are discovered and promoting yourself as a responsible person rather than a perpetrator of the problems.

  4. @Jeff –
    From what I’ve heard, a lot of things tend to get classified that don’t actually need to get classified. The attitude tends to be to classify it if there is the slightest doubt, because someone is much, much, MUCH more likely to get in trouble for not classifying something that somebody higher up the chain of command thinks should be classified, than the reverse.

    Since everything needs to be thoroughly reviewed before being declassified, declassifying is much more labor-intensive than classifying, which is why there is always a phenomenally huge backlog of classified material, most of which probably has no serious reason to be classified.

  5. Let’s err on the side of caution and declare the internet as a potential security threat. I mean, anyone can put any old piece of information there! Then let’s reductio ad absurdum a little more, and declare communication itself to be a threat, because people can share secrets with one another if they have a common language!

    That there’s a central repository for these documents is a good thing. Especially if every leaked document makes its way there, or ends up there FIRST. Because everyone can see what’s up there, including the people who then learn they need to plug some leaks. I don’t see how this is difficult to comprehend.

  6. Jason, that is because the “harm” comes from people in authority finding out that people in charge of secret stuff screwed up, not from secrets being compromised. It is only when the higher-ups find out there was a screw up can anyone be “harmed”, that is anyone who matters.

  7. I always got a kick out of the fact that strong cryptography was considered “munitions” for the purposes of the government. They seem to view anything they can’t control as an imminent threat.

  8. AFAIK: Here in oz, Defence took the attitude that anything available on the internet gets declassified. It reduced the paperwork burden enormously. If something is marked “secret”, you know that it is.

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