If millions of people know something, can it really be considered a secret anymore? That’s one of the questions at the heart of an ongoing debate in Washington about how much, and which, documents to classify in the age of Wikileaks, iPhones, and Edward Snowden.
That challenge, underscored by Mr. Snowden’s leaks of details exposing the National Security Agency’s top-secret surveillance programs, has given transparency experts new hope that they can help intelligence agencies take advantage of new thinking around classification to ensure that what needs to be secret stays secret.
“The calculation has changed recently, because a single individual, either out of negligence or malice or some other motive, can disclose whole libraries of records,” says Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists’ Project on Government Secrecy. “That’s something the government has not yet figured out how to deter or prevent.”
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 27 2017, @06:01AM
Of course, ironsmithing was used to create all sorts of tools besides implements of war or religion.
Of course, nuclear power was sought not just for weaponry, but also for energy; that's why the world's nuclear plants are so ancient and decrepit—they were one of the first things built.
Forget Fake News; you suffer from Fake History.