Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire

Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.

Monday, March 30, 2015

FAS Roundup March 30th, 2015

FAS Roundup: March 30, 2015
Image courtesy of Shutterstock 
View this email in your browser


From the Blogs


H-Bomb History Published Over Government Objections: Physicist Kenneth W. Ford, who participated in the design of the hydrogen bomb in the early 1950s, has published a memoir of his experiences despite the objections of Energy Department reviewers who requested substantial redactions in the text. “Building the H Bomb: A Personal History” was released this month, and provides an eyewitness account of several crucial episodes in the development of the hydrogen bomb.

Growing Data Collection Inspires Openness at NGA: A flood of information from the ongoing proliferation of space-based sensors and ground-based data collection devices is promoting a new era of transparency in at least one corner of the U.S. intelligence community: the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. Recently, ODNI stated that the U.S. intelligence community should make “information publicly available in a manner that enhances public understanding of intelligence activities, while continuing to protect information when disclosure would harm national security.” But some intelligence agencies have chosen a different path.

Cybersecurity Information Sharing: A Legal Morass Says CRS: There are several pending bills that would promote increased sharing of cybersecurity-related information — such as threat intelligence and system vulnerabilities — in order to combat the perceived rise in the frequency and intensity of cyber attacks against private and government entities. A new report by the Congressional Research Service finds that this information sharing is easier said than done due to conflicting and incompatible laws and policy objectives.

DoD Cut Security Clearances by 15% in Last Two Years: The Department of Defense has reduced the number of employees and contractors who hold security clearances in the past two years by more than 700,000, a cut of 15%. This previously undisclosed data was reported in the latest quarterly report on the implementation of the Insider Threat Program.
 

FAS in the News

No comments:

Post a Comment