Classified, Sensitive, and Public
Three confidentiality levels are used in DIACAP: Public Sensitive Classified
Classified, Sensitive and Public
classified,sensitive,public.
(1) Classified (2) Sensitive (3) Public
Paragraph E2.1.8 of DoDI 8500.2 states: The Department of Defense has three defined confidentiality levels: classified, sensitive, and public. Since DIACAP is based off of the requirements of DoDI 8500.2, those would be the 3 levels used for that process.
DIACAP replaced DITSCAP as the process for certification and accreditation of DoD information systems. DIACAP supersedes DITSCAP.
DIACAP is DoD Instruction 8510.01. In that respect, SOME DoD instructions fall under DIACAP, but most DoD instructions have nothing to do with DIACAP.
DIACAP Knowledge Service.
DIACAP is established by DoD Instruction 8510.01.
DoD Information Assurance Certification and Accreditation Process (DIACAP)It is the title of DoD Instruction 8510.01, which defined the process for certification and accreditation of DoD information systems (computer, computer networks, etc.) for Information Assurance (confidentiality, integrity, availability, non-repudiation, etc.).It has since been replaced by the RMF process - although as of 2016 some packages were still being allowed to process for accreditation under DIACAP with ATO's issued for much shorter periods of time.
According to DODI 8500.2, the "DIACAP team members" are defined as: E2.25. DIACAP Team. Comprised of the individuals responsible for implementing the DIACAP for a specific DoD IS. At a minimum the DIACAP Team includes the DAA, the CA, the DoD IS program manager (PM) or system manager (SM), the DoD IS IA manager (IAM), IA officer (IAO), and a user representative (UR) or their representatives.
No - DIACAP (DoDI 8510.01) superseded DITSCAP (DoDI 5200.40) in 2006.