November 14,2008:
The U.S. Department of Defense has created its own video sharing web
site; TroopTube. On May 14th, 2007, the Pentagon began blocking access to
YouTube, MySpace, Metacafe, IFilm, StupidVideos, and FileCabi, BlackPlanet,
Hi5, Pandora, MTV, 1.fm, live365, and Photobucket. These are sites that provide
video and audio clips to users. This means that anyone using a computer
connected to Department of Defense network (NIPRNET), was no longer able to
reach the banned sites. The reason for the ban was quite practical. All those
video and audio clips were jamming up the network, and making it difficult to
get official business done. This is a problem university networks began to
encounter in the 1990s, and solved by a combination of expanding capacity, and
restricting how much students could use the network for downloading large
files. The Department of Defense is in a slightly different situation, because
many of its users overseas depend on satellites for their Internet connection.
Land based fiber-optic lines can provide a lot more capacity, but in combat
zones like Iraq and Afghanistan, satellite is all that's available.
TroopTube was established because of the
backlash that developed when the troops lost access to the videos and social
networking sites. The troops use YouTube and MySpace to keep in touch with the
folks back home, and each other. It's a big deal as far as morale goes. Troops
still have access to the banned sites via non-military connections. But these
are not as accessible, and often low capacity, in combat zones. Many troops
take their laptops with them to the combat zone, and expect to use them.
In addition, the military uses YouTube as part
of their public relations efforts, to show clips of good things the troops are
doing. It appears that the decision to block access was taken without realizing
some of the side effects. Something had to be done quickly. But there are often
other consequences, like security problems, that cannot be ignored either.
So TroopTube
will encourage the uploading of videos showing the troops in action. But the
uploaded vids will be screened to make sure OPSEC (Operational Security) is not
violated, and the uploaders don't give the enemy access to information that
might endanger the troops. There are details of tactics and techniques that
videos might show more clearly than even enemy troops involved would notice. Such
videos could be used to train enemy fighters to counter the American tactics
and weapons. The military censors will also block videos that might be
embarrassing to the military (these usually show up on YouTube anyway.)