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United States News Title: Military May Ban Twitter, Facebook as Security ‘Headaches’ The U.S. military is strongly considering a near-total ban on Twitter, Facebook, and all other social networking sites throughout the Department of Defense, multiple sources within the armed forces tell Danger Room. Its the latest twist in the Defense Departments tangled relationship with so-called Web 2.083; sites. But while earlier social media blockades have been thrown up over bandwidth and secrecy concerns, this fresh ban stems from fears that Facebook and the like make it far too easy for hackers and cybercrooks to gain access to the militarys networks. Last week, U.S. Strategic Command issued a warning order to the rest of the military, asking for feedback on a social media ban on the NIPRNet, the Defenses Departments unclassified network. (Naturally, access is already denied on the secret and top secret nets.) The mechanisms for social networking were never designed for security and filtering. They make it way too easy for people with bad intentions to push malicious code to unsuspecting users. Its just a fact of life, says a source at Stratcom, which is responsible for securing the militarys global information grid. Last month, for instance, well-known venture capitalist Guy Kawasakis Twitter account was hijacked, and used to spread a sex video come-on to his 139,000 followers. Those following the link were asked to install a software update. The application was, in fact, a Trojan, which allowed hackers to take over a users machine. Similarly, one variant of the nasty Koobface worm searches a PC to find a Facebook cookie. Then the malware program uses that information to gain access to the users Facebook account. Once its in, Koobface spreads messages to online friends, enticing them to download viruses and Trojans. People are much more trusting of a message from a friend or colleague on a social network than they are of an e-mail, because theyre used to e-mails being forged, says Graham Cluley, a senior consultant with the network security firm Sophos. Thats ironic, he adds, because social networks arent really doing enough to stop these things. With GMail or Hotmail or a military e-mail account, messages are scanned for spam and viruses. Social networks arent doing that scanning. They arent checking if a link posted to a wall is malicious or spammy. Theyre just letting it through. Officially, the concept of allowing access to social networking sites (SNS) on the Department of Defense .mil networks is currently under review at this time, a Stratcom spokesperson e-mails Danger Room. It would be premature to comment on the outcome of the review. But unofficially, the ban is all-but-certain, military officers and civilian employees say. Many are upset, because after years keeping the social networks at arms length, the armed services appeared to be finally embracing the Web 2.0 sites. The Army recently ordered all U.S. bases to provide access to Facebook. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has 4,000 followers on Twitter. The Department of Defense is getting ready to unveil a new home page, packed with social media tools. We fought so hard for this, says one Army source. This is a huge step backwards. Under Stratcoms plan, units that have to regularly communicate with the civilian world, like media relations and recruiting, may be given dirty computers machines that are connecting only to the public internet, and not to the militarys private networks. The rest of the Defense Department would be cut off from the social media sites, despite protests from inside the Pentagon. People started working with these social networks before we got a handle on how to use them in the context of the Department of Defense, a Stratcom source says. Now, theyre just too big of a headache.
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