Air Force personnel on military computers are now not ready to access the websites of The Big apple Times , the Guardian, and 22 other news publications-greeted with an ” ACCESS DENIED” message instead. The rationale? WikiLeaks panic, needless to say.
Blocking direct access to WikiLeaks is some thing-but blocking the flexibility to read over twenty newspaper and media sites from worldwide is rather another. And the prohibition goes far behind suppression, warning airmen who try and access NYTimes.com, as an example, that their online activity is being monitored and perilous them with punishment, the Wall Street Journal reports.
The rationale is identical that’s been used against government employees across the country-that browsing WikiLeaks risks the spread of classified documents (besides the fact that children, for sure, that these documents are available in to anyone, anywhere on earth). But this time is different. In preference to just blocking the leaked cables, or maybe articles that link to the leaked cables, entire newspapers are now censored.
Access to the scoop-each of the news-is now impossible, from quite a few authoritative, mainstream, legitimate sources. To this point the Air Force is alone many of the branches of the military with a suppressive approach this austere, and even throughout the service, there’s some dissent in regards to the draconian directive: The WSJ quotes one anonymous official who ” said blocking the most recent York Times was a misinterpretation of military guidance to circumvent visiting websites that post classified material.” This seems less like a misinterpretation and more like a heavy-handed, rather startling try to keep Americans in the dead of night. [ WSJ ]
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