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From the Blogs
Making Government Information Open and Machine Readable:
On May 9, President Obama issued Executive Order 13642 which directs
that “the default state of new and modernized Government information
resources shall be open and machine readable.” The new order establishes
a requirement to produce an inventory of “datasets that can be made
publicly available but have not yet been released.” Steven Aftergood
writes that while one wants to believe in the efficacy of the order and
to affirm the good faith intentions behind it, it is necessary to
recognize how remote it is
from current practice, particularly in the contentious realm of national
security information.
International Intelligence Agreements and Other DoD Directives:
The U.S. Air Force released a new Instruction which establishes
international agreements for the exchange of intelligence information
with foreign military services. Secrecy News also obtained a new
Department of Defense Instruction regarding records management within
the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and a new directive on DoD
information operations.
Judge Mosman Named to Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court:
Chief Justice John Roberts has appointed Judge Michael W. Mosman of the
District of Oregon to serve as a judge on the United States Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court. The eleven-member Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court reviews applications from government agencies for
electronic surveillance and physical search under the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act. In 2012, the Court approved 1,788
applications for electronic surveillance and denied none, as noted in a
report to Congress last month.
NASA Technical Report Database Partly Back Online: The
website of the NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), a massive
collection of aerospace-related records, was disabled in March due to
congressional concerns that it had inadvertently disclosed
export-controlled information. The site is now active again, though
hundreds of thousands of previously released documents have been
withheld pending review. Rather than conducting a focused search for
actual export-controlled information and then removing it, as would have
seemed appropriate, NASA blocked access to the entire
collection.
Senate Confirms Chair of Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board:
Almost a year and a half after he was nominated by President Obama in
December 2011, the Senate confirmed David Medine to be the chairman of
the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board by a vote of 53-45 on
May 7. The Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board is an independent
agency established by Congress to ensure that privacy and civil
liberties are appropriately represented in the development and
implementation of laws and regulations related to terrorism.
A Review of No Fly Zones and More from CRS: Secrecy News has obtained recently released CRS reports on topics such as nuclear energy, U.S. science and engineering workforce, sequestration at the FAA and cuts to air traffic controllers. |
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