
“The OIG report found a pervasive lack of basic security measures and consciousness at TSA airport facilities: doors propped open or with locks taped off, unmonitored entrances, lack of logs of physical access to communication nodes and servers, lack of redundancy, etc. But the TSA tried to keep the OIG from reporting on even those problems that at already been publicly reported, after TSA review and permission, in earlier OIG reports or other pages of the same report. The real point of the TSA’s censorship is not security but avoidance of public and Congressional debate and oversight.”
Read more: https://papersplease.org/wp/2017/01/20/inspector-general-tsa-uses-secrecy-to-avoid-embarrassment/
Related posts:
More staged police body cams lead to 43 more dropped Baltimore cases
Before UN Speech, Argentine President meets with Soros
Blockchain.info: the World’s Most Popular Bitcoin Website and Wallet
Assange on NSA leak: Snowden will be prosecuted for years
It Pays to Be a Bankster: Blankfein Buys $33 Million Hamptons Mansion
The Airlines Work for Uncle Sam
Bitcoin’s Big Bank Problem: Why Did Mt. Gox Halt US Payouts?
How Musicians Smashed Racial Barriers
Was This $200 Vending Machine the World’s First Bitcoin ATM?
Rep. Louie Gohmert: Voters need ‘at least 50 rounds’ in magazines to take out drones
Drug Policy Alliance: Why isn’t the DEA shut down?
The Age of Bitcoin: Why Bitcoin Will Be Huge
Destroying the Right to Be Left Alone
“What Is That Box?” — When The NSA Shows Up At Your Internet Company
Brooklyn family accuses NYPD of causing father’s fatal heart attack