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DOD wrestles with Web 2.0

Departmentwide social media review under way

The Defense Department officially is reviewing its social media policy amid ongoing concerns over security and privacy issues. The re-evaluation comes on the heels of an Aug. 3 Marine Corps ban on the use of social networking sites, effectively immediately.

“We’re addressing the challenges from a security standpoint, but also the impact and the value that they have to the department to be able to communicate in a 21st century environment,” Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman told reporters Tuesday. Whitman added that the review is part of a directive issued in a July 31 Pentagon memo from Deputy Defense Secretary William J. Lynn II. The memo called for a study of social media sites such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.

The Marine ban and DOD review are on despite the fact that social media has become a force to be reckoned with since the 2007 reversal of an initial ban on social networking sites. Government and military have become deeply entrenched in social media tools, with hundreds of thousands of Twitter followers and Facebook fans of various military and government outfits, and mandatory accessibility on U.S. Army bases.

But, according to the Marine order, “These Internet sites in general are a proven haven for malicious actors and content and are particularly high risk due to information exposure, user-generated content and targeting by adversaries,” and it added that social networking sites create an easy conduit for information leakage.

Still, most assert that a blanket ban on social media isn’t the way to go.

“There certainly are security concerns associated with social networking. But it would be a step back to ban social networks completely,” said information technology security expert Rohyt Belani, a consultant and instructor at Carnegie-Mellon University. “I think there is a middle ground that can be reached.”

Undoubtedly, that middle ground will require the incorporation of significant security measures. At security giant McAfee, which contracts with DOD and other government and military agencies to provide network security, a comprehensive approach is used to deal with the high-stakes needs of the federal government and military.

“It’s a battle between utility and security – you need to balance both,” said Tom Conway, director of federal business development at McAfee. To meet contractual needs, his company provides advice, tools, products, assessments, deployment of strategies, threat briefings and continuous training as ongoing support to DOD and other military and government clientele.

“DOD does need a standard, departmentwide policy,” Conway said, adding that he disagreed with an all-out ban as well. “The security concerns are real and varied. But you can’t turn back the clock, and you can’t deny progress.”

About the Author

Amber Corrin is a staff reporter covering defense and national security.

Reader comments

Thu, Aug 6, 2009

Despite all the wonderful uses of commercial social media, the bottom line is that access vastly increases the threat to the overall availability and use of DoD circuits/systems. We cannot sacrifice all the other uses of our networks just so a select few can be social. Still, blanket policies and actions are inefficient. Twitter is not the same as FaceBook and MySpace. Sacrificial commercial circuits and computers can be bought.

Thu, Aug 6, 2009 Michael D. Long Knoxville, TN

The USMC policy should be the DoD wide policy. There is no potential value for "social networking" that outweighs the risk to security.

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