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US Government IT Security 'Outstandingly Mediocre'

mrneutron2004 writes wrote with a link to an article on The Register, discussing an annual IT security report card handed out to the federal government. The results this year were mixed. The good news is that they graded higher than last year. The bad news? They still just rate a C-". Individual departments did better than others, but overall the results were quite poor. "Although overall security procedures improved the Department of Defense (DoD) recorded a failing F grade. Meanwhile the Department of Veterans Affairs - whose loss of laptops containing veterans' confidential data triggered a huge security breach - failed to submit a report. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, another agency that has trouble keeping track of its PCs, flunked."

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  1. Re:Government by HomelessInLaJolla · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There's a fine point there. No, the government does not print the money. The government buys the printed money from the Federal Reserve, which is a coalition of private bankers. When we look at the federal debt, and see that the federal government is $8.8 trillion dollars in debt, it's no different than a home loan. The federal government is $8.8 trillion dollars in debt to a bank which is allowed to set all the terms of repayment--including the interest rates used for all other major financial transactions in the nation.

    We're all slaves! Yes, yes, yes we are.
    --
    the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac