Word: redacted
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...apple and aliquot. 2. Q is for quinine and quohog. 3. R is for redact and redouble. 4. S is for sabulous and saccular. 5. Z is for zombie and zorilla...
...immensely time-consuming process. Ministry staff are now going through each file to redact personal information like names and addresses in correspondence, and then scanning each page for online publishing. The whole procedure should take about three years, with files rolled out in batches, posted online on the U.K. National Archives website. Files are available for free download for the first month; afterward, users will have...
...filed by a municipal police department or county sheriff, would be unquestionably public. The University argues that the records’ release would compromise privacy. The Crimson, however, has never expressed a desire to have every single piece of information HUPD generates; HUPD, like other police forces, could redact names of victims to protect their anonymity. Other police departments do not have the authority to release incident reports selectively. Although the University claims HUPD is being as open as possible, the present situation prevents the public from even knowing what HUPD is withholding. Police reports might gesture to trends...
Never mind the fact that Dick Cheney’s hands-on role in developing the prewar intelligence picture of Iraq is, by now, a matter of public record - the CIA has asked that the declassified version of a highly critical Senate Intelligence Committee report to redact references to the Vice President. The classified version of the document does not use names, referring to actors by their title instead. But the Agency sought to have even references to titles be excised on national security grounds...
That is why I found myself, a couple of weekends ago, standing at the general store in a little village in southwest New Hampshire. My parents—as well as a few locals who heard about this piece pre-publication—insisted that I redact the town’s name from this article lest swarms of Crimson readers flock there for leaf-peeping or house-buying. This was probably unnecessary as most college students are not in the New England real estate market. Moreover, my new hometown is one of the smallest in the state and would...