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SIPRNet is a system of interconnected computer networks used by the U.S. Department of Defense and the U.S. Department of State to transmit classified information. It is the secret component of the Defense Information Systems Network and has a domain structure and naming convention similar to the open internet.
.mil is a sponsored top-level domain for the United States Department of Defense and its subsidiary or affiliated organizations. It was one of the first top-level domains, created in 1985, and is used by the US military for most of its websites, except for some recruitment, education, and non-appropriated fund sites.
The Cyberspace Capabilities Center (CCC) is the primary organization that develops cyber domain requirements in the United States Air Force. It traces its history to the establishment of the Army Airways Communications System Wing in 1943 and was designated the CCC in 2019.
The 691st Cyberspace Operations Squadron is one of the six squadrons under the 690th Cyberspace Operations Group, a United States Air Force group operating the Cyber Security and Control System weapon system. It is stationed at Ramstein Air Base, Germany and was activated in 2016.
JADC2 stands for Joint All-Domain Command and Control, a DoD initiative to connect sensors from all branches of the armed forces into a unified network powered by artificial intelligence. Learn about the history, experiments, infrastructure, services, and multi-domain operations of JADC2.
Use the IMAP settings below to download your email from AOL Mail into a third-party email app, like Thunderbird, Outlook, or Mac Mail. For accounts with a lot of content, it can take several days or longer to download everything.
AARO is a successor of AATIP, a program that studied UFOs and UAPs. It was established in 2022 and reports to the Deputy Defense Secretary. It released a report in 2024 that found no evidence of alien technology.
The 960th Group provides command and control of the network security boundaries of all Air Force installations. Technicians from the group are moving base-by-base and rolling all AF network core services (email, web access, etc.) into a single Air Force Network (AFNet). [4]