Military Steps Up War On Blogs
An anonymous reader writes "The military's war on blogs, first reported last spring, is picking up. Now the Air Force is tightening restrictions on which blogs its troops can read. One senior Air Force official calls the squeeze so 'utterly stupid, it makes me want to scream.'"
This does however remind me of that story a while back about soldiers trading pretty grotesque pictures for access to pr0n sites.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
So lets list our favorites, or good ones, or whatever...
http://michaelyon-online.com/ - embedded reporter with no corporate sponsor, etc. Does it all on his own, takes *amazing* photos, and writes well...
Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
Incidentally, you might not have noticed it amongst all the great News happening around us, but oil is back knocking on the door of the all-time record high (yes, adjusted for inflation) set in April 1980. Strange the way timings go, isn't it.
How is it that the summary goes a little far by directly quoting the article? Unless the article is completely wrong, this is about limiting which blogs can be read.
By that definition wouldn't they have to block news.google.com and news.yahoo.com among a multitude of others?
I'm sick of following my dreams. I'm just going to ask where they're goin' and hook up with 'em later.
Actually, yes, they were instructed on what rights they were giving up, given a valid enlistment contract to sign, and then swore an oath in the presence of a commissioned officer that they were performing such actions.
Jesus is coming -- look busy!
This limit is not on what blogs a soldier can read, but on which ones the soldier can post. They don't care what information is coming into the soldier, they just don't want a solider inadvertently leaking classified info..
Well, from what I have heard (and I would like to emphasize this is just what I heard) quite a large number of recruits only join for lack of any other viable options in life. Also, it is a fast track road to citizenship. It isn't what I would generally consider "willingly".
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
Whose military?
The U. S. military?
Wrong. Since you use the phrase "join" you mean "enlist". (The officer equivalent of join is "be commissioned" or "be appointed".)
Quoting DoD Directive 1304.26, "Qualification Standards for Enlistment, Appointment,and Induction":
Note the phrase "lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence". That's a Green Card.
Now, don't expect to get any kind of clearance unless you're a citizen, so expect some real limits to the specialties you can be assigned to. But "join"? Absolutely.
Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
Let me clarify this. This ONLY Applies to networks and computers you use at work.... You only use these when you are at work.. if you are not using these for work it is to kill time, and there are a MILLION ways to kill time on the internet, that the censors have not gotten around to blocking, so this is not really a big issue. If you want to read something, read it when you get home.
The article failed to mention that this would only apply to computers connected to Air Force owned and operated networks. It's not any different than a company you work for blocking access to blogs on official work computers. The article made it sound like they were trying censor ALL Internet activity...
The Article: "The Air Force is tightening restrictions on which blogs its troops can read..."
The Truth: "The Air Force is tightening restrictions on which blogs its troops can read while at work..."
USAF here, any opinions expressed are expressly my own.
.xls files and emailed them around, but you couldn't use proxies, since the comm squad can see every open page on every computer (and to log on, you use a card that identifies the user), and logs it.
at our base, slashdot, wikipedia, any social networking/video site, anything with http://blog/ was blocked (all those online newspapers with beat writers weren't readable. penny-arcade, anything with the word game in it (for the most part). people shoved flash games in
they eased up a little now (counterterrorism blog works, all of slashdot except the games section, penny arcade, wikipedia, newspaper affiliated blogs) after i sent in a help desk ticket asking why i couldn't read slashdot (doubt it's my fault they changed that, i'm sure others complained too).
anyways, when i worked corporate it, that thing was filtered FAR FAR FAR worse than this place is right now (but not quite as bad as it used to be, which was ridiculous).