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28 Oct 09

“Useful But Prohibited”: Air Force Openness Lags

  • Some of the steps that are favored by the Obama Administration to open up government to public access and participation may be “useful” but they are nevertheless “prohibited” on U.S. Air Force web sites, according to a new Air Force policy instruction.


    In a January 21, 2009 memorandum on transparency and open government, President Obama directed that “Executive departments and agencies should harness new technologies to put information about their operations and decisions online and readily available to the public…. Executive departments and agencies should solicit public feedback to assess and improve their level of collaboration and to identify new opportunities for cooperation.”


    The U.S. Air Force has a different vision, however.


    A new Air Force policy on public communications (pdf) observed that “web-based message boards, threaded chat rooms, and guest books… allow users to post opinions, messages, or information openly on a web site.  They provide a useful means of creating two-way communication but are prohibited as part of public web site services (sec. 10)”

  • These new Air Force directives, and another Air Force Instruction on Public Affairs Policies and Procedures (pdf) that was modified last week, do not even mention the January 2009 Obama transparency memorandum, and certainly do not reflect its declared intent.
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22 Oct 09

U.S. Navy CIO: Social Media Should Be Part of Military IT Standard

In a blog post this week, U.S. Navy CIO Rob Carey wrote that social media is a resource for the American military that should be used to build ...

www.readwriteweb.com/..._should_be_part_of_militar.php - Preview

MilBlogging Military social_media

22 Aug 09

Air Force Used Twitter to Track NY Flyover Fallout

  • As the Pentagon warns of the security risks posed by social networking sites, newly released government documents show the military also uses these Internet tools to monitor and react to coverage of high-profile events.


    The Air Force tracked online messaging service Twitter, video-sharing site YouTube and various blogs to assess the huge public backlash to the Air Force One flyover of the Statue of Liberty this spring, according to the documents.

  • According to the Air Force One documents released through the Freedom of Information Act, a unit called the Combat Information Cell at Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida monitored the public fallout from the April 27 flight and offered recommendations for dealing with the fast-breaking story.


    Formed two years ago, the cell is made up of as many as nine people who analyze piles of data culled from the Internet and other sources to determine whether the Air Force's message is being heard.

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04 Aug 09

Marines Ban Twitter, MySpace, Facebook

  • The U.S. Marine Corps has banned Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and other social media sites from its networks, effective immediately.


    “These internet sites in general are a proven haven for malicious actors and content and are particularly high risk due to information exposure, user generated content and targeting by adversaries,” reads a Marine Corps order, issued Monday. “The very nature of SNS [social network sites] creates a larger attack and exploitation window, exposes unnecessary information to adversaries and provides an easy conduit for information leakage that puts OPSEC [operational security], COMSEC [communications security], [and] personnel… at an elevated risk of compromise.”


    The Marines’ ban will last a year.

  • Yet many within the Pentagon’s highest ranks find value in the Web 2.0 tools.
    • More evidence here that there is still very much an internal battle over social media within DoD. Much of that battle involves differing views o what 21st century warfare is all about, what is required for victory, the relative importance of winning "hearst and minds," etc. - on 2009-08-04
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23 May 09

Israeli soldiers preach Facebook vigilantism

From the man who started the panic over Twitter supposedly causing panic, more panic over Facebook supposedly empowering holocaust deniers and causing terrorism.

neteffect.foreignpolicy.com/...rs_preach_facebook_vigilantism - Preview

social_networking Military terrorism social_media

  • Now, there is one more reason for Israel to hate Facebook: not only does it empower Holocaust deniers, it also helps to promote terrorism...
18 May 09

Are We Developing a "Different Kind" of Leaders?

  • Dempsey, the commander of U.S. Training and Doctine Command (TRADOC), went on to say that the "complexity on the battlefield that, in turn, requires a different kind of leadership and a decentralized command structure that pushes down decision-making authority to more junior leaders."
  • “We must prepare leaders for the shifting balance of operational and tactical art due to complexity and decentralization [on the battlefield],” Dempsey said. “As the operational environment becomes more complex, commanders at much-lower echelons of command must gain an appreciation of the operational art.”
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27 Apr 09

U.S. Army uses Facebook page, tweets to declare war on Ashton Kutcher's top Twitter spot

  • The U.S. Army wants you - to be its friend on Facebook.

    You can also follow the Army on Twitter. Or post a comment on its new blog. They're all part of the Army's new mission: social networking.

    "If Ashton Kutcher can do it, the U.S. Army can do it," said Lindy Kyzer, who posts the Army's "status updates" on Facebook and "tweets" on Twitter.

  • The U.S. Army wants you - to be its friend on Facebook.

    You can also follow the Army on Twitter. Or post a comment on its new blog. They're all part of the Army's new mission: social networking.

    "If Ashton Kutcher can do it, the U.S. Army can do it," said Lindy Kyzer, who posts the Army's "status updates" on Facebook and "tweets" on Twitter.

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Military Bases Block Official Army Tweets

  • The Army announced the other day that it would get a million or more followers on micro-messaging site Twitter, just like “Punk’d” host and social networking superstar Ashton Kutcher. But catching to Mr. Demi won’t be easy — since many Army bases block Twitter on its networks.


    It’s the latest example of the military’s schizophrenic relationship with social media.

27 Feb 09

DOD launches site to develop open source software

  • Defense Department officials have launched a new Web site where developers can work on open-source software projects specifically for DOD, David Mihelcic, the chief technology officer for the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), said today.




    The new site, named Forge.mil, is based on the public site SourceForge.net which hosts thousands of open-source projects
  • “It is really is SourceForge.net upgraded to meet DOD security requirements,” Mihelcic said.
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19 Feb 09

Soldiers banned from using MySpace and Facebook... in case they breach national security

Though early signs are good that the U.S. military has gone through this phase and is emerging on the other side with a more rational response--i.e. there have been recent reports of greater use of social media by commanders; each of the services have recently developed presences on Facebook, Second Life, Twitter, etc.--the Brits seem still to be in the ban-it-first-think-and-ask-questions-later phase.

www.dailymail.co.uk/...-breach-national-security.html - Preview

social_media military

10 Mar 07

U.S. Navy weighs termination of Lockheed ship

The Navy is considering terminating the construction of a shore-hugging ship being built by Lockheed Martin Corp. due to cost overruns, Navy chief Adm. Mike Mullen said Thursday.In January, the Navy took the unusual step of ordering Lockheed to halt work

www.signonsandiego.com/...8-1143-lockheed-navy-ship.html - Preview

Transformation Navy LCS Military TransTracker TechNews

  • The Navy is considering terminating the construction of a shore-hugging ship being built by Lockheed Martin Corp. due to cost overruns, Navy chief Adm. Mike Mullen said Thursday.


    In January, the Navy took the unusual step of ordering Lockheed to halt work for 90 days on the littoral combat ship (LCS) because of soaring costs.


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