Any information that is disseminated regarding DoD activities can have an impact on personnel and mission safety. However, the fact that information is unclassified is a strong indication that it has been cleared by Intelligence and is authorized for general release.
False
Information pertaining to units, force strength, personnel rosters, etc. is not made public, due to OPSEC requirements.
Retained Personnel
Active personnel: 44,900Reserve personnel: 210,930
Active personnel: 1,477,896 Reserve personnel: 1,458,500
553 up front might have been an officer or draftee designation,difficult to trace if not a relative,it's like a civilian SS number. Try: National Personnel Records Center,Military Personnel Records,9700 Page Ave.,St Louis,MO,63132-5100 for information.
False
FALSE
Unclassified information if compromised does not run the risk of impacting the safety of DOD personnel, mission or systems
I think the disclosure of any special information could have implications with any organization.
Technical, Physical & Personnel controls.
During duty hours, you must not read CUI where unauthorized personnel are present
During duty hours, you must not read CUI where unauthorized personnel are present
secret
secret
Anything that affects the proper safeguarding of classified information, Any event that may impact the status of the facility, Any event that may impact an individual's personnel security clearance, Any indication that classified information has been lost or compromised. (All Of The Above)
The American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) supports health information personnel.
Not a public one - lists of military personnel are considered classified information, and details of personnel are only given to family members or Navy personnel having a need-to-know.