I'm confused.

You think she's guilty because she hid in plain site public sensitive
information that is publicly available using FOIA?

On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 12:39 PM, Eric Roberts
<ow...@threeravensconsulting.com> wrote:
>
> I think this is a case that would be similar to one where an IT person or
> anyone else in charge of sensitive data used a weak password and thus caused
> sensitive data to be released or hacked into.  If she didn't use this
> account to transmit government business, we wouldn't have been even talking
> about this in the first place because it never would have made headlines and
> the hack probably wouldn't have ever been discovered.  Parts of the rules
> are that she use secure and approved (ie a government email account, not
> yahoo) methods to transmit government business for a few reasons.  One it's
> secure and another would be that said business is saved and backed up for
> archival purposes and for access by acts like FOIA.  SO yes, she is culpable
> in that she failed to use a secure account and she failed to properly secure
> her account.  I would say the same for any government official regardless of
> their party.
>
> Er

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