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n the State Department. The report comes at a time of
heightened concern about both cyber-security and torrents of information
leaks in the U.S. government.According to the audit report, the agency has
statutory responsibility as State's "lead office for information assurance
and security." Its top official, currently William Lay, is known as State's
Chief Information Security Officer (CISO), who reports up to State's Chief
Information Officer, currently Steven C. Taylor.Despite the agency's august
legal status, IRM/IA's staff apparently has no sense of what security functions
their unit is actually required to perform, has failed for years to
update information security manuals used by thousands of other State Department
personnel, and has often left important details about the vulnerability
of State's information systems where they can be accessed by people with
lower-level security classifications.CLICK HERE FOR THE AUDITThe State Department
said in a statement that it was taking the report's findings seriously.Much
of the agency's certification work has apparently been done by outside contractors,
often unsupervised, and often performing duties that are supposed to be
done only by government employees.Neither contractors nor staffers apparently
maintain much documentation about their work, or even about how the contractors
are being paid under a $19 million contract that could swell to
$60 million in outlying years. As the report puts
The secret intelligence court that signs off on giving the U.S. government
the authority to monitor hundreds of millions of telephone records has renewed
the governments request to do so for another three months.The Office of
the Director of National Intelligence announced Friday its authority to
maintain the program expired on July 19 and that the government had
sought and received a renewal from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act court.National Intelligence Director James Clapper announced the new
order.The surveillance program has been under intense scrutiny since June,
when former CIA employee and National Security Agency contractor Edward
Snowden leaked details of two top secret U.S. surveillance programs that
critics say violate privacy rights.Snowden has been charged with espionage
and is seeking asylum from several countries, including Russia.Clapper "has
decided to declassify and disclose publicly that the government filed an
application with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court seeking renewal
of the authority to collect telephony metadata in bulk, and that the
court renewed that authority," the statement said.The two programs, both
run by the NSA, pick up millions of telephone and Internet records
that are routed through American networks each day. Intelligence officials
say they have helped disrupt dozens of terrorist attacks, and target only
foreign suspects outside the United States while taking close care not
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