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At SXSW and facilitating a panel called A Global Discussion About Networked Nonprofits and Free Agents , I introduced myself with this photo of me and Lena, the master trainer from Yemen for the E-Mediat Project. It was always peer learning – I’d share about the technology and they’d teach me about their work.
I’ll be sharing insights on my blog as the project unfolds — it is going to be a rich opportunity for learning because it is a capacity building project that leverages a networked approach. Everyone was asked to share five words or “hash tags&# on sticky notes and place them on the wall.
I invited Roz Lemieux is CEO of Attentively and founding partner at Fission Strategy to write a guest post sharing the best and next practices for nonprofits to use listening effectively as part of their social media strategy. When more and more people began mentioning Yemen online, their trending terms chart in Attentive.ly
We wanted to share stories of that help and local support, otherwise everything would have been confounded in misery. Nicole Evans, National Director, Resource Development Strategy & Communications, Boys & Girls Clubs of America. Stephen Peeler, Executive Director, Infectious Disease Society of America Foundation.
Prior to adopting Salesforce, EFE was without a scalable database solution, relying instead on Excel spreadsheets to record and share organization data. “We We needed a strong database solution that enabled security controls and united our data,” said Ashley Barry, Director of Strategy and Learning at EFE. .
Email is not the best approach for sharing information meant to be kept private. This latest instance of dubious software use from the executive branch follows the discovery that several high-ranking national security leaders used Signal to discuss planned military actions in Yemen, then added a journalist from The Atlantic to the group chat.
The editor-in-chief of The Atlantic was accidentally added to a group text message between key national security advisers as they discussed an upcoming offensive strike in Yemen and nobody seemed to know he was there until after the bombs went off. A few days later, the Houthi group chat was created.
The Trump administration accidentally texted an Atlantic journalist its plans to bomb Yemen last week. government's secured computer network system intended for sharing such classified information. airstrikes on Houthi targets in Yemen took place on Saturday. It seems obtaining confidential information on U.S.
officials' private contact details exposed on the internet, specifically information belonging to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth , and national security advisor Michael Waltz. German publication DER SPIEGEL reports that it has uncovered U.S. national defence.
officials , at least three of whom were also members of the infamous Yemen bombing Signal group chat. On Monday, The Atlantic 's editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg reported that Waltz had mistakenly added him to a Signal group chat in which officials shared seemingly classified information. officials' tech security breaches recently.
President Trump and administration officials claimed this week that no classified information about war plans was shared with a journalist, despite The Atlantic report that specific plans to bomb Houthi targets in Yemen were included in a Signal chat the reporter was inexplicably invited to. Read full article Comments
Current and former government technologists reacted with shock and disbelief to reports that top Trump Administration officials used the consumer messaging app Signal to discuss and plan bombing strikes against Yemen-based Houthis. Waltz claims that the Signal chat group discussed no secret war plans, nor was any classified material shared.
Trump officials are scrambling to respond to the Signal group chat scandal , claiming that no classified information was actually shared in the group. officials , who were using the encrypted messaging app to plan a military attack in Yemen. There was no classified material that was shared in that Signal chat," said Gabbard. "If
The Atlantic editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg reported on Monday that a group of Trump administration national security officials inadvertently included him in a Signal group chat discussing military strikes in Yemen. A 2023 Department of Defense memo prohibited using mobile apps for even "controlled unclassified information."
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