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Tech Firms Seek Washington's Prized Asset: Top-Secret Clearances (bloomberg.com)

Major tech companies such as Facebook and Twitter are interested in hiring workers with top-secret security clearances as they deal with foreign meddling on their platforms and come under increased risk of hacks, reports Bloomberg. From the article: In doing so, companies such as Facebook are competing with defense contractors, financial firms and the U.S. government itself. Security clearances are a rare and valued commodity, whether at a bank trying to prevent hackers from stealing credit-card data and emptying accounts or at a manufacturer building parts for a stealth fighter or missile-defense radar system. Bringing former government cyber warriors on board at companies can facilitate interactions with U.S. agencies like the NSA or CIA as well as help the firms understand how to build stronger systems on their own. "They have the tradecraft," said Ronald Sanders, a former associate director of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and now director of the school of public affairs at the University of South Florida. "And the trade craft is some of the best in the world."

6 of 147 comments (clear)

  1. thats a confusing headline by AkumaKuruma · · Score: 3, Informative

    just because people have clearances doesn't mean they have skillsets that would benefit this. It just means they don't have the markers that make them untrustworthy with highly sensitive information. there are plenty of people who hold a top-secret clearance that don't know where the "any" key is

    it sounds more like someone got cyber-security industry confused with security clearance. i understand their need for cyber-defensive capabilities. some banks, like USAA, actually run their own in house cyber operations desk to help protect their digital assets. cyber-security as a trade spans across all digitally connected industries (govt, banking, industrial, commercial....) and they are all being head-hunted by the same groups. this would just be another company throwing their sharks into the feeding tank.

  2. What is this, I don't even by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 3, Informative

    Security clearances mean fuck all. It only proves you passed a background check. Bragging about it is a negative signal.

    What bullshit is this article trying to sell? Who benefits from this? Contracting companies?

  3. I call BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    You don't need any security clearance to work on a company's most secret stuff, or defend them from (cyber-)attacks or anything.
    If they're recruiting people with (a need for a) clearance, it simply means they're under government contract, either directly or through another contractor.
    Thank you Bloomberg for letting us know tech firms are working for the TLAs.

  4. Re:Clearance does not necessarily imply anything by tsqr · · Score: 3, Informative

    This whole thing sucks for people who haven't been cleared (Because it's not possible unless you're hired for a job where the government actually requires it) and reeks of favoritism for past governmental employees.

    I'd like to see federal legislation passed that either prohibits employment/job discrimination based on the possession at the time of hiring of a government security clearance, OR security clearances are automatically revoked or cancelled when leaving or changing employers and have to be re-verified to be re-instated after hiring to a new job, OR a law prohibiting an individual holding clearances from causing any of the clearances they already hold to be disclosed to a recruiter or prospective employer, other than ability to get a clearance or already having a clearance will have to be verified after a hiring decision.

    While you're at it, why not wish for a law prohibiting discrimination based on the prospective employee's skill set? The current system reeks of favoritism for people who know how to do things.

    Here's my personal experience, having held a secret clearance for 35 out of the last 40 years while working for defense contractors. Security clearances are de-activated when a cleared employee changes employers. If the new employer requests re-activation within a short period of time, there is some paperwork and minimal vetting to go through. If the request is not made within a short period of time, the employee goes through a re-verification process that requires a re-submission of all the very detailed personal information that was submitted the first time, and waits a long time (currently about a year) to be cleared. Then periodically (every 10 years or so), the employee goes through the whole thing again. If the cleared employee shifts from a position requiring a clearance to one not requiring a clearance, the clearance is suspended. If the employee returns to a position requiring clearance within six months, the clearance can be unsuspended quickly; if not, it's de-activated. If not re-activated within a fairly short period of time (6 months, I believe), it's cancelled.

    I shouldn't have to say this, but not everyone can get a clearance. Do you have a non US person that's a close relative? Recent bankruptcy? Other financial problems? Ever been arrested for anything? Ever been charged with a crime? Ever had a restraining order issued against you? Less than honorable military discharge? Used any illelgal/controlled drugs or substances in the last 7 years? Court-ordered psychiatric treatment? Ever held a non-US passport? Ever been officially reprimanded for workplace misconduct? Ever been fired from a job for cause? Failed to pay Federal, state, or other taxes? Ever used a credit counseling service? Been delinquent on any Federal debt (hint: Federally guaranteed school loans)? Ever defaulted on a loan? Ever had anything repossessed? Been evicted for non-payment of rent? Ever been sued? Ever sued anyone? Ever been a member of an organization that advocates or practices acts of violence to discourage others from exercising their Constitutional rights (hello, antifa)? Any of these can disqualify an individual, and some of them are immediate disqualifiers.

  5. You can't have cleared employees just because. by jeff4747 · · Score: 3, Informative

    To have cleared employees, your company has to be working on a government contract that requires a clearance. So Facebook, Twitter and similar can't just decide to hire cleared employees. They have to go through the process to become government contractors, and then win a contract that requires a clearance.

    Also, if you have a clearance and stop working at a job that requires a clearance, your clearance goes away. So once Facebook hires someone with a Top Secret clearance, they no longer have a Top Secret clearance and lose access to the information the article claims Facebook wants.

    Even if Facebook, et al manages to go through all the steps to get a contract that requires cleared employees, they can't work on whatever Facebook wants. Those employees have to work on that contract. Those employees also can't just say "Hey, we need to do _____ to stop ______ from hacking us", because that's classified information. The employee can't just share it with everyone at the company.

    This author should really have spent a minute or two researching how clearances work before writing this shitty article.

  6. Re:and for a job that needs the clearance! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Not so...

    If you don't have a billet (assigned job and need for a clearance) they will not do your background investigation, at any price.

    When you leave a job with a clearance, you don't lose it right away, it goes inactive and can be reactivated for a period of time which varies depending on the clearance and when you last went through the investigation process. However, once your clearance expires, you have to go though the investigation process.

    Of course, if you have had a clearance in the past, the investigative process can be a lot easier and faster because the investigation may be partially completed and a lot of the information already vetted. It may be faster, but it is no less complete. Also, once you have a clearance, you are subject to the nondisclosure agreement until you die, regardless of your clearance status.