Media Ny Times to Introduce Digital Paywall on March 28th Robots Robots Now Actually Fine at Video clip Games, Humanity in Peril Protection RIM: Disable JavaScript on your BlackBerry for Safety Design Sci-Fi Motion picture Interfaces: Why Transparent Screens Are Miserable to work with Trending: Facebook Apple Google Protection iPhone Android Points Wikileaks Structure Celebs Cell phones BlackBerry 101 Much more Subjects » FILED UNDER: politics,
Office 2007 Ultimate Key, Uh oh. There's a new leak on the Internet and it's extra interesting than a ########## celebrity. On May 6th, the government accidentally posted a 266-page document, some of which was marked "highly confidential," that contained detailed information about hundreds of the country's public and private nuclear facilities. Although not actually classified according to National Nuclear Security Administration head Thomas D'Agostino,
Windows 7 Professional, the document was in fact revealed on the Government Printing Office Web site by mistake, the Associated Press reported on Wednesday. Government sources have stressed that none of the information poses a national safety risk, but D'Agostino is worried that the list could make uranium storage facilities and other sites related to the country's nuclear programs easy to locate. The document had just been reviewed by President Obama and was bound for Congressional review when it was unintentionally posted online. The document has since been taken down, but information about a uranium storage facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and nuclear reactors in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Washington State have already made it out -- if only through the AP's article. We'd think that,
office 2010 Verkauf, with all the energy the Feds are putting into the White House and Pentagon cybersecurity initiatives,
Microsoft Office 2007 Intégrale, they could at the very least keep their secrets, well, secret. [From: AP, via Scientific American] Tags: cybersecurity,
Office Professional Plus 2007 Key, defense, government, nuclear, obama, top, uranium