Was talking to a friend tonight that spent 5 years in a DOD SCIF.
Let me preface.
In years of talking to this friend they have never told me anything they saw or did in the SCIF. True ironclad on the security.
Anyway, they said something interesting to me tonight.
When they went for intelligence training, one of the first things they were taught was, all classified information is actually unclassified.
"You just have to be smart enough to piece it together"
So i asked them, "kind of like Sundance at CTH about Russiagate and the current barrage of doctors talking out about Covid and the vaccines"?
" and about Q"
They replied, "Yes, precisely"
I apologize for use of they as pronoun. Hopefully, it is understood.
There is a NATO document concerning OSINT.
http://www.oss.net/dynamaster/file_archive/030201/ca5fb66734f540fbb4f8f6ef759b258c/NATO%20OSINT%20Handbook%20v1.2%20-%20Jan%202002.pdf
Combine that with resources Corey Diggs uses, or what Yaacov Appelbaum is doing, some real interesting things can surface.
Given the nature of threats, it seems imperative to be on top of things. Real time data comes in very handy.
It seems to me the latter is another reason why things are classified. it provides an advantage, both strategic and tactical, in certain theaters.