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Memory Hole Un-Redacts Redacted DOJ Memo

DrDNA writes "After a Freedom of Information Act request, the US Justice Department released a study on workplace diversity. However, nearly half of the memo was blacked-out. In what was apparently an incredible goof, it was posted in a PDF format called Image+Text. The folks at The Memory Hole simply removed the image, revealing the redacted text. The redacted text was highly critical of the DOJ's diversity efforts, as the New York Times reports." Folks, if you're going to be sneaky, at least do enough research to make sure you're really being sneaky.

5 of 453 comments (clear)

  1. Re:This happened once before... by airConditionedGypsy · · Score: 4, Informative
    This does seem to be a common goof. Bruce S. had some commentary in his newsletter a couple of months ago.

    --
    I bootleg Fizzy Lifting Drinks.
  2. Re:This happened thrice before... by VValdo · · Score: 5, Informative
    Yes, it happened a few times...

    ...with a Carnivore review team...

    ...with a justice department document...

    ...and a CIA document containing agent's names


    W

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    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  3. Re:absolutely appalling by benja · · Score: 3, Informative

    While I agree this is "absolutely appaling," re "Notice that the blacked out text is always negative, where positive text is left in:"

    Even complimentary conclusions were deleted, like one that said "attorneys across demographic groups believe that the Department is a good place to work" and another that said "private industry cites DOJ as a trend-setter for diversity." Beyond that, a recommendation that the department should "increase public visibility of diversity issues," was kept out of the public report.

    (from the article)

  4. to fully understand the situation... by joebeone · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't think the slashdot poster was fully able to highlight the gravity of this:

    http://politechbot.com/pipermail/politech/2003-O ct ober/000143.html

    Subject: DoJ uses Word's "Highlight" tool to redact, doesn't work

    Hi Declan, Dave:

    A HARD LESSON TO LEARN: don't use Microsoft Word's "Highlight tool"
    with the color set to black to redact documents--one can still copy
    and paste "highlighted" text!

    The really interesting part about this DoJ case is reading the
    un-redacted document and seeing what was "blacked out" under FOIA
    exemptions (un-redacted document is here:
    http://www.thememoryhole.org/feds/doj-attor ney-div ersity-unredacted.pdf
    ).

    I wonder how many other electronic FOIA-released documents are out
    there where a simple copy and paste will reveal redactions?

    Pertinent paragraph:

    "It turns out the [DoJ's] report began its life as a Microsoft Word
    document, and whoever was in charge of sanitizing it for public
    release did so by using Word's highlight tool, with the highlight
    color set to black, according to an analysis by Tim Sullivan, CEO of
    activePDF, a maker of server-side PDF tools. The simple and convenient
    technique would have been perfectly effective had the end product been
    a printed document, but it was all but useless for an electronic one."

    Joe

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    http://www.securityfocus.com/news/7272

    Justice e-censorship gaffe sparks controversy

    By Kevin Poulsen, SecurityFocus Oct 22 2003 3:46PM

    A government watchdog group Wednesday accused the Justice Department
    of improperly censoring portions of a key report on internal workplace
    diversity, after online activists successfully unmasked the
    blacked-out portions of an electronic copy of the document.

    The 186-page report was released to the public under the Freedom of
    Information Act last week and posted to Justice Department's website
    in Adobe's "Portable Document File" (PDF) format. But the department
    blacked out vast portions of the document's text, citing an exemption
    to FOIA that permits agencies to keep internal policy deliberations
    private.

    The text didn't stay concealed for long. On Tuesday a website called
    the Memory Hole, dedicated to preserving endangered documents,
    published a complete version of the report, with the opaque black
    rectangles that once covered half of it completely removed. Memory
    Hole publisher Russ Kick won't say how he unmasked it, but
    experimentation shows that the concealed text could be selected and
    copied using nothing more than Adobe's free Acrobat Reader. Once
    copied, the text is easily pasted into another document and read.

    It turns out the report began its life as a Microsoft Word document,
    and whoever was in charge of sanitizing it for public release did so
    by using Word's highlight tool, with the highlight color set to black,
    according to an analysis by Tim Sullivan, CEO of activePDF, a maker of
    server-side PDF tools. The simple and convenient technique would have
    been perfectly effective had the end product been a printed document,
    but it was all but useless for an electronic one. "Using Acrobat, I'm
    actually able to move the black boxes around," says Sullivan. "The
    text is still there." ...

  5. Apple re-redacts the un-redacted document. by rworne · · Score: 3, Informative

    When viewing the report supplied by Memory Hole under Adobe Reader 6.0 the redacted parts in yellow show up and all is fine.

    Under Preview.app (OS X's PDF viewer, Panther's in my case), all the yellow sections are removed.

    It's a conspiracy I tell you!

    --
    I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit