Sensitive Information

Sensitive information is knowledge that might give someone an advantage if revealed to persons not entitled to know it. It can take several forms, such as government thinking re fiscal policy, details of a company's latest model, a game plan adopted by a sports team, or simply the whereabouts next weekend of Janet whom John has a crush on but Janet wishes to avoid. Governments and business organizations worldwide protect their sensitive information by not revealing it to employees and others not entitled to know of it, and by asking those who are entitled to know of it to sign pledges that they will never reveal it. In the United States of America, Sensitive Information is broadly described as: information, the loss, or misuse, or unauthorized access to or modification of which could adversely affect the national interest or the conduct of federal programs, or the privacy to which individuals are entitled to under 5 U.S.C. Section 552a (the Privacy Act of 1974), but that has not been specifically authorized under criteria established by an executive order or an Act of Congress to be kept secret in the interest of national defense or foreign policy. (Source: from Federal Standard 1037C and from the National Information Systems Security Glossary).

 

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response time
responsivity
restoration
return loss
rf power margin
ringaround
ringback signal
ringdown
ringer equivalency number
ring latency
round trip delay time
routing indicator
rubidium standard
rural radio service
saturation
scan
schematic
scrambler
screen
secondary frequency standard
second dialtone
security
security kernel
security management
self synchronizing code
semiautomatic switching system
sensitivity
separate channel signaling
serial access
serial transmission
service termination point
shadow loss
shannon's law
sheath
shield
shift register
shot noise
sideband
signal compression
signaling
signal processing gain
signal to crosstalk ratio
signal to noise ratio
signal transition