Above the P is classified paragraph markings.. (TS//NF)
But I could see how someone without a lot of experience might confuse the letters. I notice a lot of aviation communication transcripts, for example, get information wrong when it's a nonstandard word/phrasing.
It’s not really “artifacts” it was “crossed out” by typing over the paragraph markings with XXXXX
I don’t know why they used that method versus the more “proper” strike through with a single line, but I’m 100% positive that’s what was used there.
Because the paragraph was redacted, the TS//NF information was removed so there is no reason for the paragraph to be labeled that way anymore.
I can’t personally think of an instance when he has used “hidden” text, such as inside a photograph or anything, but I’m not that smart, I’m just a government worker with a former TS clearance.
Above the P is classified paragraph markings.. (TS//NF)
But I could see how someone without a lot of experience might confuse the letters. I notice a lot of aviation communication transcripts, for example, get information wrong when it's a nonstandard word/phrasing.
It’s not really “artifacts” it was “crossed out” by typing over the paragraph markings with XXXXX
I don’t know why they used that method versus the more “proper” strike through with a single line, but I’m 100% positive that’s what was used there.
Because the paragraph was redacted, the TS//NF information was removed so there is no reason for the paragraph to be labeled that way anymore.
I can’t personally think of an instance when he has used “hidden” text, such as inside a photograph or anything, but I’m not that smart, I’m just a government worker with a former TS clearance.