The U.S. government announced steps Friday to impose severe restrictions on any person who has access to confidential information, so as to avoid another breach of the scope of documents to Wikileaks and the military and diplomatic cables.
The presidential order requires U.S. agencies to appoint persons of high level to prevent and detect any breach of the formation of a task force to monitor any irregularities probably carried out by government officials or employees or diplomats or soldiers dealing with confidential data.
The White House said the announcement of the plans that the Task Force will be chaired by the Minister of Justice and the Director of National Intelligence will identify broad policies for the government to prevent data theft and the development of binding standards within a year.
Officials familiar with the matter and who examined the new proposals to prevent leakage, the most anticipated and clear to some extent in response to information security on the computer and the Internet.
The White House said in the statement "the strategic imperative for our efforts is to ensure appropriate protection for our confidential information, at the same time providing information to all who need it is reasonable for the performance of their business."
The cause for the Wikileaks site and more than 250 thousand telegrams telegram from the Foreign Ministry last year's embarrassing to the U.S. government, and angered officials from Mexico to Italy about the revelations of explicit comments against American diplomats, mostly critical comments.
The presidential order issued Friday is the product of months of deliberations of the Committee established by the White House after the disaster, and insiders said that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had undermined U.S. efforts to work with other countries and has threatened U.S. national security.
Source: Reuters
The presidential order requires U.S. agencies to appoint persons of high level to prevent and detect any breach of the formation of a task force to monitor any irregularities probably carried out by government officials or employees or diplomats or soldiers dealing with confidential data.
The White House said the announcement of the plans that the Task Force will be chaired by the Minister of Justice and the Director of National Intelligence will identify broad policies for the government to prevent data theft and the development of binding standards within a year.
Officials familiar with the matter and who examined the new proposals to prevent leakage, the most anticipated and clear to some extent in response to information security on the computer and the Internet.
The White House said in the statement "the strategic imperative for our efforts is to ensure appropriate protection for our confidential information, at the same time providing information to all who need it is reasonable for the performance of their business."
The cause for the Wikileaks site and more than 250 thousand telegrams telegram from the Foreign Ministry last year's embarrassing to the U.S. government, and angered officials from Mexico to Italy about the revelations of explicit comments against American diplomats, mostly critical comments.
The presidential order issued Friday is the product of months of deliberations of the Committee established by the White House after the disaster, and insiders said that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had undermined U.S. efforts to work with other countries and has threatened U.S. national security.
Source: Reuters
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