Huh. I wonder if agencies ever use these dots to figure out who provided documents to Congress, @USGAO, Inspectors General, @US_OSC, etc. Anybody researched this? @MarkSZaidEsq @BradMossEsq @GovAcctProj @ZuckermanJason @CompassRosePLLC @schwellenbach @mcculloughirvinhttps://twitter.com/evacide/status/1012071073355972608 …
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I’ve heard about these dots on printed documents before—way before Winner...to figure who’s using classified documents... didn’t NSA get dinged in the wake of Snowden for failing to have these kinds of measures in place? Suggesting the practice was used by other agencies...
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Yeah, but apparently these are on just your avg run of the mill docs too, suggesting any agency official who knows about it could abuse it. Imagine a Congressman calls you and asks you about a doc. You ask for a copy "to review," then you might be able to figure out his source.
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Didn't she also use USBs or something else? I feel like she didn't cover her tracks that well--allegedly.
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You could say that. She e-mailed from a work computer the media entity to whom she leaked a classified doc, as well as was easily tracked as having accessed & printed the doc in question. She pled guilty so no more "allegedly".
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