Freedom of the Press on Nostr: “Those classification levels—‘secret,’ ‘top secret,’ and ...
“Those classification levels—‘secret,’ ‘top secret,’ and ‘confidential’—all have to do with varying degrees of damage to national security.
“But the executive order on classification doesn’t define damage to national security, which makes the system inherently...ripe for abuse.”
Published at
2024-10-22 21:25:36Event JSON
{
"id": "86041a3e2fa8ea71d4143e0c46e975e7aeb9f740c9a9ca75652b527d468d1b55",
"pubkey": "0035b0d3930a9f6cd8bd81b179cddbd6042088e2dd3c3aa57d34d3711c460f2e",
"created_at": 1729632336,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"e",
"75838781c42d77903dd19f2827659569dce0f905264e94a0039cf6e71b66e88f",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://newsie.social/users/freedomofpress/statuses/113353184781163505",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "“Those classification levels—‘secret,’ ‘top secret,’ and ‘confidential’—all have to do with varying degrees of damage to national security.\n\n“But the executive order on classification doesn’t define damage to national security, which makes the system inherently...ripe for abuse.”",
"sig": "c58c8aac78610dc82892c283c464cd64151f1234548b5b80a09598845b9e13c6e628e8c6d4ffae02925edd28422ec4ee97df3c2060d99e3ac07574fda2dbfdd6"
}