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this post was submitted on 12 Mar 2024
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United States | News & Politics
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You don't need clearance to know a document exists, and you don't even need to know the contents or even the subject matter of the document. Just give the document an RFID sticker or similar and you can then track it pretty much anywhere on government property. So an audit would just be scanning tags and comparing with a database that says where those tags should be.
That's obviously simplistic, but it's a proof of concept that the people at places like the NSA or FBI could refine. It should be fairly easy to tell if a document is where it ought to be.
With long range RFID readers existing that is bad opsec. You don't need to know the contents of a document to exploit it's dissemination, in certain cases.
I'm thinking something like this:
Step 2 could use a temporary RFID tag as well, which gets replaced at each checkout. That way all an attacker would know is that an RFID tag is being used, they wouldn't necessarily know it's a classified document.
Obviously the approach would need to be refined (I don't deal with classified documents), but the general approach should work, especially if RFID is used for a bunch of less sensitive documents as well so RFID tags become commonplace.
What's nuts to me is that it took so long for authorities to track those documents down, and they didn't even get them all. They should have all been tracked down between the time Trump lost reelection and the time he left office, and perhaps confined to the White House.
I’m thinking there wouldn’t be enough secure rooms to house all the documents, without making it difficult to access them. I
The mundane documents don't need to be stored in a secure room, they just need to reuse tags from the secure vault to help obscure the classified documents.
Presumably secure storage already exists and blocks RF, so the main change here should be tagging.