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Culture War Roundup for the week of April 17, 2023

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Following the Texeira leak, I have a question which I do not see covered at all in any of the press. Has been there any investigation started into the security structure failures that led to these leaks? It is obvious that it is a systemic failure - a glorified janitor shouldn't have an access to top secret documents, and most of these documents didn't have much business to be on National Guard airbase anyway, they don't have anything to do with whatever Air Force is supposed to be dealing with. Somebody is responsible for the security on Otis Air National Guard Base - and that somebody screwed up big time. Do we know about anybody being places on leave, suspended, demoted, whatever it is? What is the usual procedure in the Army when something like this happens? How much consequences could be expected to people responsible for preventing such things from happening?

Janitors getting top secret clearances happens regularly.

Secret documents get leaked regularly too. Should somebody be held responsible or the approach is like que sera, sera?

I think first one would need to show that there's a viable alternative. As @Quantumfreakonomics pointed out, someone needs to do janitor duty in the closed area. That person needs to have a security clearance so that they can go in there. That means that no matter how unreasonable it may seem on its face, literal janitors are going to be granted top secret clearances. I don't necessarily disagree that this seems dumb, but I also don't know that I see a better way.

Perhaps this is a potential market for Boston Dynamics. An airgapped robot with janitorial tools instead of hands seems fairly hack-proof, or at least less likely to access secret information than a human.