blottsie writes from a report via Daily Dot: Earlier this year, the FBI released a free, online video game featuring sheep in its attempts to fight terrorism recruitment efforts. The game is called The Slippery Slope of Violent Extremism, and it is a real thing that exists. You can play it here. After journalists filed a FOIA request to find out more about the game, the FBI said it would take two years to respond — a staggeringly long wait that helps expose how the Bureau actively avoids responding to open-records requests. The information requested asked for “all documents — specifically memos, email correspondence, and budgets — around the development, release, and public reception of the FBI’s Slippery Slope game. It’s the one with the sheep.” There are several reasons why it would take two years to respond. One reason is because of the lack of requests. “If 500 people want to have the FBI file on a famous dead person, that’s going to be available, and it’s going to be available quickly,” J. Pat Brown, an employee at MuckRock, a nonprofit that helps journalists, researchers, good government groups, and interested members of the public make FOIA requests of government agencies, said. “But basic requests about agency activities are pushed into their own pile,” adds Daily Dot. Another part of the problem has to do with the outdated technology used by government agencies. “Many of the computers the FBI is using to search for this material are from the 1980s and lack graphical interfaces. Outdated technology being a hurdle to government transparency is common across many federal agencies. The CIA only accepts FOIA request by fax machine, for example,” reports Daily Dot. “In 2013, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, which oversees the NSA among other agencies, was unable to accept FOIA requests for months because its fax machine broke and it had to wait until the next fiscal year to get it replaced.” What’s more is that government agencies are often not required to disclose information after long wait times for processing FOIAs. “As Ginger McCall of the Electronic Privacy Information Center told the Daily Dot in 2014, she once waited four years with near total silence on a FOIA request about the TSA’s airport body-scanner technology only to get a note out of the blue from TSA saying she had to respond with 30 days if she wanted them to continue processing her request,” reports Daily Dot. “When McCall reached out to others who had made FOIA requests to agencies under the Department of Homeland Security umbrella, they reported similar experiences.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – How a Video Game About Sheep Exposes the FBI’s Broken FOIA System
