Hey, We Know This Is Fake News: Sharing Secrets on Signal

April 24, 2025

Some government professionals allegedly blundered when they accidentally shared secret information via Signal with a reporter. The reporter, by the way, is not a person who wears a fedora with a command on it. To some, sharing close-hold information is an oopsie, but doing so with a non-hat wearing reporter is special. The BBC explained what the fallout will be from this mistake: “Why Is It A Problem If Yemen Strike Plans Shared On Signal?”

The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg alleged received close-hold information via a free messaging application. A government professional seemed to agree that the messages appeared to be authentic. Hey, a free application is a cost reducer. Plus, Signal is believed to be encrypted end to end and super secure to boot. Signal is believed to be the “whisper network” of Washington D., an area known for its appropriate behavior and penchant for secrecy. (What was Wilbur Mills doing in the reflecting pool?)

While the messages are encrypted, bad actors (particularly those who may or may not be pals of the United States) allegedly can penetrate the Signal system. The Google Threat Intelligence Group noticed that Russia’s intelligence services have stepped up their hacking activities. Well, maybe or maybe not. Google is the leader in online advertising, but its “cyber security” expertise was acquired and may not be Googley yet.

The US government is not encouraging use of free messaging apps for sensitive information. That’s good. And the Pentagon is not too keen on a system not authorized to transmit non-public Department of Defense information. That’s good to know.

The whole sharing thing presents a potential downside for whomever is responsible for the misstep. The article says:

“Sensitive government communications are required to take place in a sealed-off room called a Sensitive Compartmentalized Information Facility (SCIF), where mobile phones are generally forbidden. The US government has other systems in place to communicate classified information, including the Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System (JWICS) and the Secret Internet Protocol Router (SIPR) network, which top government officials can access via specifically configured laptops and phones.”

Will there be consequences?

The article points out that the slip betwixt the cup and the lip may have violated two Federal laws:

“If confirmed, that would raise questions about two federal laws that require the preservation of government records: the Presidential Records Act and the Federal Records Act. "The law requires that electronic messages that take place on a non-official account are preserved, in some fashion, on an official electronic record keeping system," said Jason R Baron, a former director of litigation at the National Archives and Records Administration. Such regulations would cover Signal, he said.”

Hey, wasn’t the National Archive the agent interrupting normal business and holiday activities at a high profile resort residence in Florida recently? What does that outfit know about the best way to share sensitive information?

Whitney Grace, April 24, 2025

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