Today's Article
Bush's 'Open
Source Center'
apparently exists to
shield hard-to-find,
unclassified records
from public access
and oversight.
The American Spark
Bush's 'Open Source Center' Keeping U.S. Public In The Dark
By Cliff Montgomery - June 2nd, 2008
The ironically-named "Open Source Center" (OSC), run by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
(ODNI), has created a rather heavy-handed set of controls for dissemination of its unclassified media.
The OSC's own website freely declares its supposed intention:
"OpenSource.gov provides timely and tailored translations, reporting and analysis on foreign policy and
national security issues from the Open Source Center and its partners. Featured are reports and translations
from thousands of publications, television and radio stations, and Internet sources around the world.
"Also among the site's holdings are a foreign video archive and fee-based commercial databases for which
OSC has negotiated licenses. OSC's reach extends from hard-to-find local publications and video to some of
the most renowned thinkers on national security issues inside and outside the US Government."
But in practice, it often seems that the Bush Administration's "Open Source Center" solely exists to shield
hard-to-find, unclassified records from public access and oversight.
For those not yet convinced of the closed policy of ODNI's "Open Source Center", we provide below a
recently-posted notice from the OSC's password-protected website, as first disclosed by the Federation of
American Scientists, a top government secrecy watchdog group:
"Content available via this website must not be disseminated to the public. All content available via this
website is treated as copyrighted material and is provided for U.S. Government purposes only.
"Such purposes may include rebroadcast, redistribution, dissemination, copying, and hyper-linking provided it
is for official U.S. Government purposes only. Any removal or redistribution of content outside of official U.S.
Government channels requires the advance authorization of OSC.
"Information under the control of external websites to which OSC may provide hyperlinks may have separate
restrictions and shall be accessed only in accordance with any usage policies and restrictions applicable to
those sites."
"Authorized system users may use the content available via this website to support official U.S. Government
business and may disseminate this information to other U.S. Government components.
"In disseminating this content for other U.S Government component use, U.S. Government personnel must
use a password-protected email system. System users who are partners (e.g. individuals or groups
maintaining a formal OSC relationship), may also use the content, as authorized by OSC, to support their
official business and must use a password-protected email system.
"Contractors with access to this site may only have that access during the time period as required to fulfill their
contract responsibilities."
So though the information in question already is unclassified, and most of it is publicly available--hence it is
safe to disseminate, by any stretch of the imagination--the Director of National Intelligence still demands as
much control as possible over the flow of this data to the American people.
Such an unmediated, blind thirst for authority says more about the DNI--and more about the true nature of this
White House--than any well-crafted declaration ever could.
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