Air Force ‘Big Brother’ Blocks Blogs, composition Sites
A large organization decides that blogs cut productivity, supply misleading data and could compromise protection. It discontinues access for its personnel, even though info is a key weapon in competition. The question is whether that is a smart policy for a large organization, particularly the U.S. Air Force.
According to a report that week in Wired, the Air Force is eliminating access for its troops to virtually any site that uses the term “blog.” Sites are plus being blocked considering of a negative review of substance by supervising personnel. The move comes, according to the publication, as the Cyber Command of the Air Force Network Operations Center (AFNOC) takes by control of what sites Air Force personnel can visit, a responsibility previously borne by each major command.
Block First, next Review
Maj. Henry Schott of AFNOC is quoted by Wired as saying that the Air Force personnel can still access “primary, official-use sources,” such as established media like The New York Times. The basic view is that
The Air Force will block other, less-established sources on the basis that they supply less credible knowledge. The policy, according to one Cyber Command spokesperson, is to “block first and next review exceptions.” that means that Air Force personnel posting to or reading from sites that might relate to technical or military subjects have found themselves caught in the filters.
The tools used by the Air Force have included Secure Computing’s SmartFilter software, running the Web shield Appliance platform from Blue Coat software. According to a press release on Blue Coat’s site, SmartFilter’s universal control list “continuously categorizes millions of Web sites into substance groups, including pornography, gambling and MP3.”
The Air Force has plus banned some sites…
Original post by Chris Davies
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