Bouhammer's Military Blog

A blog about Military Issues, Afghanistan, and everything in between

DOD finally publishes New-Media Guidance

This is a huge announcement that came out on Friday. Sorry I just now got around to writing about it, but I wanted to highlight this announcement as I hope it opens up more troops to blog and causes Commanders to embrace the idea of new media. This is also the first DOD wide policy to come out as to date, it was up to each of the services.

 

Everyone from troops in the field to the highest brass and civilian leaders will be allowed to Twitter, blog and use Facebook and other social networking sites on the military’s non-classified computer network, the Pentagon announced Friday.

The new policy follows a seven-month review in which the Defense Department weighed the threats and benefits of allowing the wide use of emerging Internet capabilities. It essentially seeks to manage the risks while acknowledging the Internet is proving a powerful tool for a myriad of tasks including recruiting, public relations, collaboration with a wide range of people and for communications between troops and their families.

To guard security, it allows commanders to cut off access – on a temporary basis only – if that’s required to safeguard a mission or reserve bandwidth for official use. The new directive also makes practices uniform across the entire department, in which different commands previously blocked certain things while others didn’t. Visiting sites for pornography, gambling or hate-crime activities is still prohibited on military computers.

"We need to take advantage of these capabilities that are out there – this Web 2.0 phenomena," said David M. Wennergren, deputy assistant secretary of defense for information technology. "The idea is be responsible and use these tools to help get the job done."

The new directive means that YouTube, MySpace and more than a dozen sites blocked by the Pentagon in May 2007 will be unblocked, he said. The Pentagon said at the time that the use of video sites in particular was straining its network and using too much of its bandwidth. But Wennergren said Friday that the move failed to stem the use of bandwidth because people just went to alternate sites.

Marines Ban Social Networking, but maybe we should ban laptops

So it is official that the Marines have banned some of the leading social and new media networking sites like Twitter, Facebook and Myspace. Their reasoning sounds valid and understandable (Story out today about the newest Facebook security loophole, www.networkworld.com/newsletters/dir/2009/080309id2.html). They are concerned about viruses, malware, etc. having another means to infiltrate the official Marine data network. They are not banning Marines from getting on via personal accounts and personal computers from home.

You can read the official Marine story here, www.armytimes.com/news/2009/08/marine_socialnetworking_080409w/

McQ over at Blackfive has a good analysis of what this means also at www.blackfive.net/main/2009/08/the-marines-ban-twitter-story-.html

Of course in light of me being notified yesterday by National Guard Bureau that 131,000 former and current National Guard members identities being lost on a laptop that was stolen from a Government contractor, I am starting to wonder where the real vulnerability is (www.armytimes.com/news/2009/08/army_idtheft_080409w/).

The bottom line is that the media is making more out of this than it really is. Yes it may inconvenience some from tweeting or updating their status on Facebook while at work, but that is probably the largest impact. For those Marines that are deployed and in very small locations with no Haji-net available then it may have a greater impact. The military network may be their only way to connect. The Marines are saying waivers could be granted, so maybe they will give those guys waivers in order to facilitate them staying in contact with family members while deployed into the gates of hell.

I suspect we will see the rest of the DOD to follow suit very soon. One interesting thing to note is that CJCS Mullen is on twitter at twitter.com/thejointstaff (I follow him) and he stated the day this story came out that he plans to keep twittering. He acknowledged the fine line DOD must walk between transparency and security.

Later today at 4:30PM I will be on BBC’s the NewsHour talking about this particular subject. You can listen live on any local station that carries the BBC ( you can find what local station carries BBC here, www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmeguide/location/country/us?button=Go) or online at www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/news/2009/03/000000_newshour.shtml

Bouhammer.com now on Facebook

Bouhammer.com has its own page on Facebook now. This is a different than my personal Facebook page. This page is dedicated to Bouhammer.com as it is a further spread of the image. I have The Dude blogging on Bouhammer.com now, Scott Kesterson is doing exclusive weekly podcasts and who knows who else will be writing on here in the near future.

So head over to www.facebook.com/pages/Bouhammercom/89530801112 and if you aren’t a Facebook member, then join.

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