"Simply securing sensitive information" can be a bear of a problem. At least in my experience, maintaining sensitive material is prone to "mission creep". As an organization or project ages, it produces more and more secret material, of course. Moreover, there also tends to be a lot of associated stuff that also gets sucked into the classification scheme for various reasons, not least of which is simple laziness: it can take a LOT of effort to inspect and scrub information for release.Sometimes I think that goes too far, or is handled too strongly, which leads to distrust, rather than simply securing sensitive information.
Uh, no. That would be . . . . . . . . . . .AHah! Defender of the Universe!
FLASH! GORDON!!!
Uh, no. That would be . . . . . . . . . . .