US Air Force orders ban on removable media

Late lockdown.

Senior US Air Force officials have appealed to personnel not to use removable media on any systems residing on the Defense Department's SIPRNET network, in the wake of the latest Wikileaks scandal.

"All Air Force organizations must immediately suspend all SIPRNET data transfer activities on removable media," read a December 3 order, obtained by Wired magazine.

SPIRNET was the source of the latest tranche of documents that many suspect were delivered to WikiLeaks by Private Bradley Manning.

The United States Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) issued a statement in November after the latest release conceding that its post- September 11 efforts to improve information-sharing had "backfired".

The appeal to personnel not to use removable media appears to be an interim measure as Defense responds to two recent reviews which called on the department to disable all write capabilties for removable media on classified systems and limit data transfers to a few machines.

Australia's Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd, in a radio interview responding to cables about his character, said liberal access to US information systems was the "core problem" behind the release.

"When you have a quarter of million cables and on top of that you have people who have had access to the system ... in excess of two million people, that's where the problem lies," the former Australian Prime Minister said.

Stopping leaks however, is expected to have a price-tag.

The Air Force order also acknowledged that the ban on removable media will mean staff "will experience difficulty with transferring data for operational needs which could impede timeliness of mission execution."

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.
US Air Force orders ban on removable media

What are your thoughts on this article? Add your comment below.

To begin commenting right away, you can log in below or register an account if you don't yet have one. Please read our guidelines on commenting. Offending posts will be removed and your access may be suspended. Abusive or obscene language will not be tolerated. The comments below do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of SC Magazine, Haymarket Media or its employees.

NOTE: You must be a registered member of SC Magazine to post a comment.

Click here to login | Click here to register
comments powered by Disqus
Sign up to receive SC Magazine email newsletters
   FOLLOW US...
Most Read