The Pentagon on Thursday defended a decision to block popular Web sites including YouTube and MySpace on U.S. military computers, saying it needed to keep its network clear for operations.
Military officials said they had restricted access to more than a dozen recreational sites because they had registered high levels of use on U.S. Department of Defense computers.
Rear Adm. Elizabeth Hight, deputy head of the Defense Information Systems Agency, said the Pentagon needed to ensure bandwidth on its network of more than 5 million computers was not clogged by the use of those sites.
"This network is critical for our effective and efficient and safe combat operations," Hight told reporters.
"We use it for everything from ordering supplies to sending orders to providing logistics information, scheduling people to get on an airplane, scheduling goods to move from point to point," she told reporters at the Pentagon.
Rep. Ed Markey, the chairman of the U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee on telecommunications and the Internet, has called on the Pentagon to reverse the decision, which took effect on Monday.
In a letter to Defense Secretary Robert Gates earlier this week, Markey said troops overseas had used many of the blocked sites to communicate with family and friends and that those contacts were critical for morale.
But the Pentagon said many of the sites had already been blocked on military computers in Iraq and Afghanistan for more than two years and troops had many other ways of keeping in touch with loved ones.
The Pentagon agency responsible for morale provided commercial Internet services free of charge at bases across Iraq and Afghanistan and those would be unaffected by the decision, Hight said.
She said the Pentagon had not banned troops from using the sites but had simply decided they could not be accessed from U.S. military computers to preserve bandwidth.
New technologies such as streaming video were real "bandwidth hogs," Hight said.
"We just simply cannot accommodate the growth in the bandwidth demands of this newer technology for both official reasons and recreational sites," she said.
The Pentagon said the blocked sites included YouTube, 1.fm, Pandora, MySpace, PhotoBucket, Live365, hi5, Metacafe, MTV, ifilm.com, Blackplanet, stupidvideos and filecabi.
Pentagon Defends Move to Block Web Sites
By: Reuters
| May 18,2007
Tags: [ YouTube ] [ MySpace ] [ Social networking site ] [ Video sharing site ] [ US military ] [ Pentagon ] [ Bandwith ] [ Website ]
| Ads by Google | ||
Why don't you post one?
LATEST NEWS
- Transcend Unveils 4GB Ultra-compact Flash Drive
- Facebook Could See a Standoff Over Scrabble
- Great Deal on Day of Defeat: Source
- Google Ventures Into Virtual Reality With 'Lively'
- DreamWorks Animation Goes From AMD to Intel Chips
- Credit Check Required to Buy iPhone 3G
- BlackBerry Thunder Media Player Pics Revealed
- Pioneer to Sell Blu-ray Disc Recorders
- Tata Indicom Offers Welcome Tunes Online
- mChek, redBus Launch Ticket Booking Via Mobiles
| Ads by Google | ||
RELATED
| Ads by Google |
Hot Searches & Keywords :
AMD
AOL
ATI
Adobe
Apple
Asus
Blackberry
Blizzard
Blu-Ray
Bluetooth
CES 2007
CES 2008
Canon
Capcom
China
Creative
DVD
Dell
E3 2007
EA
Electronic Arts
Gears of War
Google
HP
Halo
IBM
ITunes
Intel
Internet
Ipod
LCD
LG
Linux
Logitech
Microsoft
Mobile
Mobile Phone
Mobile Phones
Motorola
Mp3
Myspace
Nintendo
Nokia
Nvidia
PC
PMP
PS2
PS3
PSP
Philips
Reliance Communications
Samsung
Sandisk
Search Engine
Skype
Smartphone
Sony
Sony Ericsson
Toshiba
Ubisoft
Valve
Vista
Voip
Website
Wi-Fi
Wii
Windows
Windows Mobile
Windows Vista
Xbox
Xbox 360
Xbox Live
Xbox360
Yahoo!
Youtube
Zune
digicam
digital camera
iPhone
mp3 player
printer
social networking site
test
yahoo
| Ads by Google | ||
|
|
Sections
Products
Camcorders |
Controllers |
CPUs |
Desktop PCs |
Digital Cameras |
Digital Video Recorders |
DVD Players |
Games |
Gaming Consoles |
General |
GPS Systems |
Handhelds / PDAs |
Hard Drives |
Headphones & Headsets |
HiFi Audio Systems |
Home Theater Systems |
Input Devices |
Internet |
Laptops |
Low Level Components |
Mac Systems |
Mobile Phone Accessories |
Mobile Phones |
Monitors |
Motherboards |
MP3 / Audio Players |
Multi-Function Devices |
Networking |
Optical Drives |
PC Accessories |
PC Add-on Cards |
PC Cabinets |
PC Games |
Printers |
Projectors |
RAM Modules |
Scanners |
Software |
Speakers |
Telecom |
TVs |
Video Players |