Vindicarre wrote:
I understand that.
I was commenting on:
Quote:
It illustrates exactly the point I made above: You put it all out there, but then tell people not to look at it because you're constantly trying to balance usefulness and compromise.
Right, but that has nothing to do with everyone having access to all levels.
There are basically 4 levels of classification: Unclassified, Confidential, Secret, and Top Secret. Within each of those, there can be additional caveats and restrictions, but those are the only four levels. (Confidential sees little use too, so there's really only three important ones)
The vast majority of people only have access to unclassified material, and a lot of that is flagged For Official Use Only which limits its dissemenation to official purposes even if you don't need a security clearance to see it.
Only relatively few people have Secret access (although in absolute numbers its still quite a few people) and only a small percentage of those have access to Top Secret.
For example, in my battalion only three people have Top Secret: Me, the Commander, and my Intel Analyst.
In my personal view, therefore, the Commander, my Analyst and I should (if we had a TS terminal which we don't) be permitted to look at anything on the TS version of the Web. If someone specifically needs to restrict information from being viewed, they should handle it on a case by case basis.
"Need to know" should be used very sparingly for people already having the clearances. For people that don't have the clearance, Need to Know should be the guiding principle. Right now, however, there's a terribad balancing act betweent he two that generally results in information being not only known by too many people, but also not being known by the
right people.