@pieist There's only so much they can do to prevent people with access from misusing sensitive information. I suppose they could tighten up access, and impose further controls. But if someone is determined to misuse the information they have access to, I don't know what can be done.
@slcw All of which skirts the core question: is our naive supposition even remotely true that restricted, highly sensitive information is actually restricted to the smallest possible set of carefully vetted personnel who actually have a need for it?
@barks @slcw As a supposition it's pretty famously untrue. i was at a talk by a former intelligence chief who talked about the dilemma faced by our intelligence partners:
If they don't share intelligence with us, they're cut out of a vital loop, but if they do, their intelligence will be dissipated into a vast and unguarded US public sector and discussed openly by first-year congressional aides brown-bagging their lunches in DC parks.