owenpalmer 15 hours ago

This move actually makes a lot of sense, and it's shameful that the US government has failed to implement this already. As far as security goes, there's no reason why the system can't be built securely. It's simply a matter of building constraints around who gets to access what data, for what reasons, and what procedures are necessary to grant that access.

It's not like the US government's current systems have any sort of robust security in place. Centralization will hopefully incentivize this effort.

  • lesuorac 14 hours ago

    > This move actually makes a lot of sense, and it's shameful that the US government has failed to implement this already.

    Because it's not permitted by law.

    You are not allowed to use data collected by the USG except for the purpose that it was collected for [1].

    Obviously the law doesn't matter much right now and that's why the USG is pursuing it (and due to a lack of security; leaking it straight to other countries).

    [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privacy_Act_of_1974

  • gamblor956 14 hours ago

    It's simply a matter of building constraints around who gets to access what data, for what reasons, and what procedures are necessary to grant that access.

    Or in other words, do the exact opposite of what DOGE is doing...

  • GuinansEyebrows 15 hours ago

    > As far as security goes, there's no reason why the system can't be built securely.

    there are as many reasons as there are employees of DOGE. i'm not sure why you would trust them to do anything in a secure manner; they certainly haven't earned it.