Second, in March 2003, the IG advised General Hayden that he should report violations of the Authorization to the President. In February of 2003, the OIG learned of PSP incidents or violations that had not been reported to overseers as required, because none had the clearance to see the report.
And you thought your organizational problems were tough.
"(TS//SI//NF) General Hayden stated that he never asked for or read the OLC legal opinion supporting the PSP. The Deputy GC stated that it was his understanding that the [legal] opinion [supporting authorization] was not shared with the NSA because it was considered confidential legal advice to the President."
So he didn't want to know it because "President says it's cool, and if it's not, well that's his problem, not mine." Except when you have this level of secrecy, it takes an extraordinary act like Snowden to shed any light on the matter and bring about legitimate criticism. So many levels of negligence here...
So, the NSA was known to tap, track and view Obama's comms in the past - but at the same time they claim to not read some info because they are "respecting the legal advice as confidential"?
Where does the crazy hypocrisy stop with these people. I think they are all absolutely insane.
Technically this probably should be tagged as (2009). It's also technically a (TOP SECRET/STLW/ORCON/NOFORN) document, so if you have a clearance, you shouldn't be viewing it. (if you don't have a clearance, you also shouldn't be viewing it, but that's someone else's problem...)
Pretty remarkable that this means that folks with a clearance will end up with less information than those without one.
Is this a commonly-discussed problem in the security world? Is there an exception granted for publicly-disseminated information (such as leaks published in newspapers)?
A publicly clickable link can only be clicked. Imagine if you consciously don't want to click but your toddler nearby messes with your keyboard and clicks the link. Do you then become suspicious due to no fault of your own?
This is a very extreme leak, technical details of capabilities, names of persons (and locations)... No bueno amigos, glad I don't deal with classified documents, I'm sure their lives are becoming hell now.
I'm really interested in the names of the companies. Sad they used "COMPANY A" instead of naming them -- given how classified the report was, I wonder why.
[+] [-] aphyr|12 years ago|reply
And you thought your organizational problems were tough.
[+] [-] ozi|12 years ago|reply
So he didn't want to know it because "President says it's cool, and if it's not, well that's his problem, not mine." Except when you have this level of secrecy, it takes an extraordinary act like Snowden to shed any light on the matter and bring about legitimate criticism. So many levels of negligence here...
[+] [-] samstave|12 years ago|reply
Where does the crazy hypocrisy stop with these people. I think they are all absolutely insane.
[+] [-] rdl|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] leot|12 years ago|reply
The only reason to worry is if you believe that your accessing of this document is being tracked by the authorities ...
[+] [-] chockablock|12 years ago|reply
Is this a commonly-discussed problem in the security world? Is there an exception granted for publicly-disseminated information (such as leaks published in newspapers)?
[+] [-] webwanderings|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lukecampbell|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|12 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] chockablock|12 years ago|reply
since this document was released by the Guardian, and is discussed and linked to by the article at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/27/nsa-data-mining-...
[+] [-] unknown|12 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] doctorstupid|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rdl|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rdl|12 years ago|reply