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	<ModuleName>M01_L02</ModuleName>
	<AU>M01_L02</AU>
	<Title>Leaks and Spillage</Title>
	<Subtitle>M01_L02</Subtitle>
	<LinkSet>links</LinkSet>
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			<RMAText>Page x of y</RMAText>
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			<Label>Help</Label>
			<RMAText>Help. Select this button to open the help panel.</RMAText>
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			<ID>mainMenuBtn</ID>
			<Label>Main Menu</Label>
			<RMAText>Main Menu. Select this button to access the main menu.</RMAText>
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			<RMAText>Glossary. Select this button open the glossary.</RMAText>
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			<RMAText>Resources. Select this button to access the resources for the course.</RMAText>
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			<RMAText>Turn Audio Descriptions Off. Select this button to turn off audio descriptions.</RMAText>
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			<RMAText>Skip Forward. Select this button to skip a few frames ahead.</RMAText>
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			<Label>Replay</Label>
			<RMAText>Replay. Select this button to replay the current screen.</RMAText>
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			<Label>Transcript</Label>
			<RMAText>Transcript. Select this button for a transcript of the current page.</RMAText>
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			<Label>Pause</Label>
			<RMAText>Pause.Select this button to pause the course.</RMAText>
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			<Label>Resume</Label>
			<RMAText>Resume. Select this button to resume the course.</RMAText>
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			<ID>previousPgBtn</ID>
			<Label>Back</Label>
			<RMAText>Back. Select this button to go to the previous screen.</RMAText>
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			<RMAText>Next. Select this button to go to the next screen.</RMAText>
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	<Topics>
		<Topic>
			<Title></Title>
			<Subtitle></Subtitle>
			<Pages>
				<Page>
					<Title></Title>
					<Subtitle></Subtitle>
					<Filename>disaldr02_01</Filename>
					<PageNbr>1</PageNbr>
					<Sec508Data Page="disaldr02_01"></Sec508Data>
					<ShowText Page="disaldr02_01">
						<Txt frameNbr="5">The worst has already happened. Leaks and spillage of our most sensitive secrets do occur, and these leaks and</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="178">spillage cause irreparable harm. The media is always listening. Terrorists and foreign intelligence services are waiting</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="385">for us to make a mistake. What can you, as a senior leader, do to prevent the worst from happening again? How do you</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="598">respond when all of our security measures fail?</Txt>
					</ShowText>
				</Page>
				<Page>
					<Title>Preventing Leaks and Spillage</Title>
					<Subtitle></Subtitle>
					<Filename>disaldr02_02</Filename>
					<PageNbr>2</PageNbr>
					<Controls>
						<RollOverButtonControl name="rollover1">
							<RMAText>SF-312, 
Classified Information Nondisclosure Agreement
</RMAText>
						</RollOverButtonControl>
					</Controls>
					<Sec508Data Page="disaldr02_02"></Sec508Data>
					<ShowText Page="disaldr02_02">
						<Txt frameNbr="5">Some leaks are deliberate. Others are unintentional. Whether due to the acts of a malicious insider, an off-hand</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="171">comment to a reporter, or a careless e-mail sent across networks; leaks and spillage cause damage. Do you know</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="348">how to prevent them in your organization? And thereby protect your mission? We all know that the only people</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="502">authorized to receive classified information are those who are eligible, or cleared, to access the information; who have a</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="690">need to know; and who have signed an SF-312, a Classified Information Nondisclosure Agreement. Anyone else is an</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="897">unauthorized recipient, no matter how senior or how close to you. To prevent leaks in your organization, remember that</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1085">you, as a senior leader, are a role model, so be diligent in your own actions. Always verify that recipients are authorized</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1299">access before sharing any classified information and ensure your organization's personnel do the same. Leaks</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1482">and spills are frequently inadvertent. To prevent the following scenarios from occurring in your organization,</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1633">ensure awareness of and compliance with security procedures. For example, If your personnel inappropriately</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1811">apply classification markings, your public affairs office may accidentally release controlled information to the public. If, in a</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2016">meeting with a foreign counterpart, one of your program managers discusses separate pieces of unclassified</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2157">information and forgets that, when compiled, that aggregated information becomes classified, he may reveal sensitive</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2333">program details. If a senior staff member forgets which network he or she is on before hitting send on an e-mail describing</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2535">troop movements, operational plans may be compromised. If, when synching your smartphone or other mobile</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2709">device, your staff person fails to take note of which system the device is being plugged into, you may have a serious</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2860">security incident. Therefore, as a senior leader, you must make sure your personnel are aware of the consequences of leaks</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="3041">and spills to the organization and to the individual responsible for the leak or spillage.</Txt>
					</ShowText>
				</Page>
				<Page>
					<Title>Leaks and Spillage in the Media</Title>
					<Subtitle></Subtitle>
					<Filename>disaldr02_03</Filename>
					<PageNbr>3</PageNbr>
					<Sec508Data Page="disaldr02_03"></Sec508Data>
					<ShowText Page="disaldr02_03">
						<Txt frameNbr="5">In this day and age, leaked or spilled information often makes its way to the Internet. Sometimes, leakers do</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="163">everything they can to make sure classified information receives the widest possible audience. Do you and your</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="322">organization's personnel know what to do when you find classified information on the Internet? Data spillage is a</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="494">specific kind of leak in which protected information moves from a higher classification or protection level to a lower one.</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="681">In the worst data spills, classified information appears in the public domain before security personnel can contain</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="837">the spill. Remember that leaked classified or controlled information is still classified or controlled even if it has been</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1030">compromised. Remind your organization's personnel that they must not download classified information</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1181">discovered on the Internet. Doing so could create a new case of spillage. As a senior leader, members of the media</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1373">will be eager to ask you to confirm or deny the validity of leaked information. Unless you have specific authorization to</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1556">speak as a senior Government authority regarding the leak, you must not do so. Any comment by you will be seen as</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1740">a statement by an official Government spokesperson.</Txt>
					</ShowText>
				</Page>
				<Page>
					<Title>Responding to Leaks and Spillage</Title>
					<Subtitle></Subtitle>
					<Filename>disaldr02_04</Filename>
					<PageNbr>4</PageNbr>
					<Controls>
						<RollOverButtonControl name="rollover1">
							<RMAText>Appropriate authorities, 
Report leaks and spills to authorities internal and external to your organization: 
Bullet	Original Classification Authority (OCA)
Bullet	Information owner/originator
Bullet	Information Assurance Manager (IAM)/Information System Security Manager (ISSM)
Bullet	Activity security manager 
Bullet	Responsible computer incident response center
Bullet	Law enforcement
Bullet	OUSD(I)
</RMAText>
						</RollOverButtonControl>
					</Controls>
					<Sec508Data Page="disaldr02_04"></Sec508Data>
					<ShowText Page="disaldr02_04">
						<Txt frameNbr="5">Some leaks are massive. Others are small. All require quick action. How would you respond? When spillage does</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="209">occur in your organization, you, as the senior leader, must be on the front lines of the response. You should</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="382">immediately consult with your security staff. You must also inform the appropriate authorities of the spillage,</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="535">including the Original Classification Authority, or OCA, the information owner, and law enforcement, if criminal acts are</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="732">suspected. Your security personnel will help you isolate and contain the spill to both minimize damage and preserve</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="918">evidence that may be required for damage assessment, risk assessment, law enforcement, or counterintelligence</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1088">purposes. You should also ensure that your organization initiates an investigation to determine the cause of the leak</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1262">and to establish responsibility. If the leak involves a serious security incident, such as espionage or disclosure to the</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1445">public media, or may otherwise attract public attention, you must report it to the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1611">for Intelligence, or OUSD(I), through security channels. Also report to OUSD(I) if the leak or spill is likely to cause significant</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1860">harm to our national security or relates to our most sensitive information or capabilities, such as defense operations or</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2056">technologies, Special Access Programs, or Sensitive Compartmented Information. When responsibility for an</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2240">inquiry into an unauthorized public media disclosure is unclear, OUSD(I) determines which DoD Component has</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2435">investigative primacy. Some incidents are so serious or of such interest to the public that OUSD(I) must report them to</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="2654">Congress on behalf of the Secretary of Defense.</Txt>
					</ShowText>
				</Page>
				<Page>
					<Title>Consequences of Leaks and Spillage</Title>
					<Subtitle></Subtitle>
					<Filename>disaldr02_05</Filename>
					<PageNbr>5</PageNbr>
					<Controls>
						<RollOverButtonControl name="rollover1">
							<RMAText>OCA, 
Original Classification Authority
</RMAText>
						</RollOverButtonControl>
					</Controls>
					<Sec508Data Page="disaldr02_05"></Sec508Data>
					<ShowText Page="disaldr02_05">
						<Txt frameNbr="5">In some cases, the damage to national security and to the mission that results from a leak or spill is immediately obvious.</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="203">In other cases, it may take years, even decades, to understand how the leak undermined and degraded our</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="341">capabilities or cost lives and mission. When a spill happens, the OCA, appropriate subject matter experts, and security</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="561">officials will conduct a damage assessment to determine the likely impacts of the disclosure, and the harm it caused to</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="727">national security and the mission. Regardless of the determination of the harm caused, classified information</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="893">was classified for a reason. Consequences of unauthorized disclosure are serious, and personnel in your organization</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1080">need to be aware of the sanctions they can face if they are involved in a leak or spill, up to and including potential</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1251">criminal prosecution. If you believe criminal prosecution is warranted relating to a leak or spill from your organization, you</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="1453">should consult with appropriate legal counsel within the DoD.</Txt>
					</ShowText>
				</Page>
				<Page>
					<Title></Title>
					<Subtitle></Subtitle>
					<Filename>disaldr02_06</Filename>
					<PageNbr>6</PageNbr>
					<Sec508Data Page="disaldr02_06"></Sec508Data>
					<ShowText Page="disaldr02_06">
						<Txt frameNbr="5">The worst has already happened. Don't let it happen in your organization! Prevent leaks. Protect lives.</Txt>
						<Txt frameNbr="209">Protect your mission.</Txt>
					</ShowText>
				</Page>
			</Pages>
		</Topic>
	</Topics>
</Module>