''' *TEXTING-!WOW!* -ELECTIONS-
TRANSPARENCY '''
DON'T JUST LIVE YOUR VERY COMFORTABLE LIVES : Our own fears can be our greatest gifts!
STUDENTS MERIUM, RABO, SEHER KHAN/ King's College : Now girls, one of you ought to track down : Ambassador Malala Yusafzai and explain to her:
*That the World at Large can't and won't scale*.
Only
the *Students of the World* can. As pure and as simple as that.
So, Malala, [ this youngest Nobel Laureate, mankind has ever
honored ] in her every speaking assignment and tour-
Should
totally refer to the beauty and honour of the World Students Society,
and the fact that Global Elections are in the air. And the honour and
the auspices of hosting these elections is with the Students of
America.
Malala
should work and sacrifice ten times more, travel the world and ensure
100% that Every single student of the world, and all Professors
and Teachers should join up.
!WOW! -will some day, give insight into every Cloud . Therefore, You, the great students of :
Russia, Peru, Lima, Argentina, Canada, Mexico, Cuba, New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia, North Korea, Sweden, Norway, UAE, Qatar, Iran, Afghaninstan,
China, Bhutan, Thailand, Australia, Bangladesh, Brazil, Doha,
Madagascar, Philippines, Hungary, Poland, Spain, Turkey, Egypt, Morocco,
Tanzania, Uganda, Chad, Sudan, Nigeria, Pakistan, Syria, Iraq, Greece,
South Korea, Taiwan, and all and every country of the world
.........drop everything and seize the moment,
NOW STUDENTS , I repeat, yet again : ''Don't just live your very comfortable lives.''
Merium? Rabo? Malala? Dee? Haleema? Saima? Shahzaib? Salar? Bilal? Jordan? Eman? Zara? Mustafa? Ibrahim? Hussain? Sanyia? Faraz? Omer? Awais? Wajahat? Humayun? Aqsa? Haider? Reza? Toby? Vishnu? Zaeem? Danyial? Ahsen? Armeen?
SELF-DELETING messages can also foul up long established record-retention practices and, for some federal employees, maybe the world over, they may constitute a violation of the law.
White
House staff members, for example, are required by *Presidential
Records Act of 1978, to store copies of their work-related
correspondence, while employees of other federal agencies, including
State Department are required to save their communications under the
Federal Records Act.
When these records are
created outside of official channels -or when, in the case of
disappearing messages, they're never created at all -a piece of
History is lost.
Few issues produce bipartisan
consensus in Washington these days, but the secure messaging trend has
drawn criticism from all sides.
Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a watchdog group, recently
filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, alleging that Mr.
Trump and his associates were :
''Ignoring and outright flouting'' public records laws by using Texting apps like Confide.
Judicial
Watch*, a conservative group, sued the Environmental Protection
Agency over its staff members' reported use of Signal, calling the
Apps popularity among government workers ''disturbing'' and saying
that it ''may make it difficult for their work to be overseen.''
''It's a serious issue that part of the legal record is being destroyed'' said John Wonderlich, the executive director of the Sunlight Foundation, a group that advocates open government.
*''Lots of record-keeping requirements does not work very well at all for the modern world.*''
Secure
chats are especially tough to regulate, because they leave very few
traces by design. But the scrutiny of the practice is growing.
In March, David S. Ferriero,
America's archivist. sent a memo to officials at federal agencies
reminding them that they were ''responsible for properly managing
electronic messages that are federal records'' a cross a wide range of
communications systems.
Representative Mike Quigley, Democrat of Illinois, recently introduced the Communications Over Various Feeds Electronically for Engagement [or COVFEFE] Act, which would extend the reach of the Presidential Records Act to include social media posts and other digital records*.
Daniel Jacobson, a former White House Lawyer during the Obama administration,
told this research author that use of apps like Signal and Confide
among Trump administration officials might technically amount to
criminal activity, under the laws that prohibit the destruction of
government property.
And while White House staff members are unlikely to go to jail for texting, he said the preserving public records was an essential democratic, no matter which apps official use.
''The public has a right to know what people in the White House worked on,'' Mr. Jacobson said.
''Especially
at a time where basic facts are often disputed, it is important to know
that the truth will one day be made public.''
Whether illicit or innocent, the use of secure texting apps is probably here to stay. The alternative is just too fragile. in a world where a data breach can mean disaster.
It's therefore up to regulators and technologists to find a solution that provides both security and accountability.
If
modern communication methods can be aligned with record-keeping laws,
it will ensure that when our leaders conduct official business, the
public still gets the message
Loud and Clear..
With
respectful dedication to the Leaders, Students, Professors and Teachers
of the World. See Ya all on !WOW! -the World Students Society and
Twitter-!E-WOW! -the Ecosystem 2011:
''' All Sciences- All Arts '''
Good Night and God Bless
SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless
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