Military takes aim at removable media

The US military has come up with a cunning way to prevent the leaks of classified documents: it has banned troops from using removable media.

The move appears to be a response to claims by soldier Bradley Manning that he was not only responsible for the leak of both a video of a helicopter attack in Baghdad and the recently published batch of US diplomatic cables, but that he was able to get the documents out simply by writing them to a CD-R that he had labeled as containing Lady Gaga music.

Earlier this year, a Pentagon review suggested that all military computers containing classified information be set-up so that they cannot write to removable media. It’s not known if this measure has been implemented as of yet, though there is now a security system that monitors around 60% of the machines for unusual activity.

The new order bans the use of any removable media on SIPRNet, a collection of networks run by the Department of Defense and Department of State for handling classified material. Millions of people have access to SIPRNet, which frankly makes it amazing that no data was leaked before Manning’s actions.

Removable media was also banned at one point in the past from SIPRNet during a scare over a worm spreading across the network. The new measure appears to be a permanent move.

While some in the military say the change will make their jobs harder (one source told WIRED it is like trying to build a home without a hammer), officials say the ban will be enforced. The memo announcing that change reminds staff that continuing to use removable media would be a direct failure to follow orders and could result in a court-martial.

What’s your biggest maintenance headache on the network – and how are you solving it?

As far as I’m concerned, one of the things that gives me the biggest headache when it comes to network maintenance, is probably everything related to patch management. Oh, we do have an awesome patch management solution where I work, but the whole thing is still driving me insane occasionally. Patches breaking operating systems, patches not deploying properly, and patches being just plain frustrating. But unfortunately, they’re a necessary evil, and can even be a blessing on occasions.

But what about you, dear IT geeks? What’s your biggest maintenance headache on YOUR network – and how are you solving it?

YouTube Santa: The Good List Gets Unlimited Upload Length

Today Youtube announced that it was lifting the restriction it’s placed on the length of video content being uploaded to their platform. This is great news, because we don’t have to chop our videos into 15-minute chunks to get them uploaded and playable.

The Catch

Starting today, we’ll begin allowing selected users with a history of complying with the YouTube Community Guidelines and our copyright rules to upload videos that are longer than 15 minutes.

We all know that Youtube had kept the limit to 15 minutes to make it more difficult for people to post copyrighted content on the site. But apparently they are now comfortable enough with their detection algorithm to lift this limit and let “trusted” accounts upload longer videos. Unfortunately, we don’t know exactly what that criteria is yet, but it still seems like a step in the right direction to give amateur movie makers a bit more creative freedom!