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by sliverstorm
5097 days ago
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there's no reason to not release it without a FOIA request. How about the cost of digging up that information? Or the effort to ensure each piece of information released is indeed safe for release? Or the effort to put it all together in a coherent set? The government has a TON of records. Releasing them is not as simple as picking the "public" checkbox in the settings pane. There might also be a general concern that if someone had access to the entire database of records, they could mine that database and start to infer other information that is not supposed to be known. This sort of tactic has been used in wars past. Compiling supply chain records to infer troop movements, for example. |
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I'd characterize your reply as concern trolling.
I've done my share of FOIA requests. I imagine I've heard most every excuse. Including "We lost the backup tapes."
Being charitable, the reason public records requests are hard, expensive to fulfill is because efficient records management is rare, making finding and retrieval difficult.
Someone may chime in suggesting CMS, workflow, sharepoint, whatever. Yea. If it was just that easy, everyone would be doing it.