National Security Council adds Gmail to its list of bad decisions

May Be Interested In:Nodule found in former President Joe Biden’s prostate during routine physical exam


The Washington Post that members of the White House’s National Security Council have used personal Gmail accounts to conduct government business. National security advisor Michael Waltz and a senior aide of his both used their own accounts to discuss sensitive information with colleagues, according to the Post‘s review and interviews with government officials who spoke to the newspaper anonymously.

Email is not the best approach for sharing information meant to be kept private. That covers sensitive data for individuals such as social security numbers or passwords, much less confidential or classified government documents. It simply has too many potential paths for a bad actor to access information they shouldn’t. Government departments typically use business-grade email services, rather than relying on consumer email services. The federal government also has its own internal communications systems with additional layers of security, making it all the more baffling that current officials are being so cavalier with how they handle important information.

“Unless you are using GPG, email is not end-to-end encrypted, and the contents of a message can be intercepted and read at many points, including on Google’s email servers,” Eva Galperin, director of cybersecurity at the Electronic Frontier Foundation told the Post.

Additionally, there are regulations requiring that certain official government communications be preserved and archived. Using a personal account could allow some messages to slip through the cracks, accidentally or intentionally.

This latest instance of dubious software use from the executive branch follows the discovery that several high-ranking national security leaders used Signal to discuss planned military actions in Yemen, then added a journalist from The Atlantic to the group chat. And while Signal is a more secure option than a public email client, even the encrypted messaging platform can be exploited, as its own team last week.

As with last week’s Signal debacle, there have been no repercussions thus far for any federal employees taking risky data privacy actions. NSC spokesman Brian Hughes told the Post he hasn’t seen evidence of Waltz using a personal account for government correspondence.

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

How to Pick the Right MacBook for You
How to Pick the Right MacBook for You
Tariffs won't just hit your wallet. They could also increase food waste.
Tariffs won’t just hit your wallet. They could also increase food waste.
Life Kit offers tips on how to care for a grieving friend
Life Kit offers tips on how to care for a grieving friend
Live updates as House prepares to vote for speaker and new Congress begins today
Live updates as House prepares to vote for speaker and new Congress begins today
Birmingham’s bin worker strike highlights gap between rich and poor
Birmingham’s bin worker strike highlights gap between rich and poor
Illustration of the App Store logo in front of a background of gavels.
Apple says it’s following the law by removing TikTok from the App Store
Hot Topics: The Stories the World Is Watching | © 2025 | Daily News