hear! hear!

I spent the last hour drafting a message to the list with this same idea. I was 
just turning in to sleep on my thoughts for the night, when Paul beat me to it.

--Craig Constantine, http://constantine.name


On Jun 11, 2013, at 10:33 PM, Paul Graydon <[email protected]> wrote:

Aloha Ski,

I've got to say, I was really disappointed in the message put out by the board. 
 It managed to say basically nothing in a lot of words.  I know this is a 
complicated situation and one LOPSA should be careful not to fall on any 
particular line for, but the statement is far more damaging than valuable.  It 
is my opinion that LOPSA should release a strong statement condemning the 
actions from a professional perspective.

"System Administrators must make a wide variety of judgment calls that depend 
greatly upon the nature of their position. Those judgment calls are dependent 
upon the seriousness of the situation and help inform how the illegal or 
unethical activity is reported.  Some of the reporting considerations include 
whether there is an available internal reporting structure, a requirement to 
use the internal procedures, or if a higher legal authority is deemed necessary 
due to the nature of the report. To again compare to both the military and 
clergy situations, they must be prepared for serious investigation and personal 
consequences based upon their actions and strive to not follow something wrong 
with a wrong of their own."

That provides absolutely no position from LOPSA as a professional organisation, 
yet the position should be abundantly clear.  He had a strong professional 
obligation not to leak data.  SysAdmins generally have all the keys, all the 
access to absolutely everything in the company.  It's hard to do our job 
without it (unless the organisation is of sufficient size).  With that comes a 
lot of professional responsibility.  We have to be trustworthy, or at best 
we're doomed to be inefficient and unproductive.

LOPSA really should have come out with a clear and strong message on that 
score, instead you've released something potentially damaging in an attempt to 
sit on the fence.  If LOPSA as an organisation cannot make a strong statement 
on something so blatantly professionally wrong, what else are you going to fail 
to make a statement for?  It makes me wonder what other unprofessional conduct 
you are going to tacitly support?

Is this the kind of behaviour I want to be financially supporting with my 
membership?  Right now I don't think it is.  My renewal has just gone through, 
and I'm not going to outright cancel it but I will be seriously reconsidering 
this over the next year.


Whether or not Snowden has a moral or ethical responsibility as a citizen of 
the United States to divulge the information, that's a whole other rather 
complex discussion, and absolutely one that LOPSA should be steering clear of.  
It could have made it abundantly clear in its statement that it was doing so, 
and why it's not it's place to judge on that.

For what it's worth I'm inclined to think he should have leaked it, and that he 
arguably had a personal, and ethical responsibility to do so.  That's a 
personal obligation though, not professional obligation.

Paul

p.s.

It's also factually incorrect.

"Edward Snowden, who worked in the field of system administration, claims to be 
a person who passed classified documents to reporters about US surveillance 
programs."

It's a simple fact, not a vague claim.  The Guardian and its journalists have 
been in contact with him for several months and have been leaking the 
information starting last week.  They were the ones that then revealed his 
identity at his request on Sunday, and released the video interview.  It's not 
a case of him standing up and saying "Oh oh look at me, I did it", it's the 
organisation he gave the information to that did it.


On 6/11/2013 7:29 AM, Ski Kacoroski wrote:
> Derek, 
> 
> Thanks very much for starting the discussion thread on this topic.  The board 
> has been in active discussions about it also and has posted a statement at: 
> 
> https://lopsa.org/content/lopsa-statement-regarding-system-administrator-eric-snowden
>  
> 
> We look forward to your comments. 
> 
> cheers, 
> 
> ski 
> 
> On 06/11/2013 09:37 AM, Derek Balling wrote: 
>> 
>> On Jun 11, 2013, at 12:24 PM, Daniel Gilmartin <[email protected]> 
>> wrote: 
>>>   I think part of the trust of the public for 
>>> systems and network people is that while we are 'good' we are also 
>>> neutral, we don't take sides - we make things work and this changes 
>>> that notion. 
>> 
>> If you're working for one of the sides you ARE taking sides. 
>> 
>> D 
>> 
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>> 
> 

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