MS. GREENBERG: Okay. Our next question comes from Jim Finkle:
Can you please let the staff use an alternative web browser called
Firefox? I just – (applause) – I just moved to the State Department
from the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency and was surprised
that State doesn’t use this browser. It was approved for the entire
intelligence community, so I don’t understand why State can’t use it.
It’s a much safer program. Thank you. (Applause.)
SECRETARY CLINTON: Well, apparently, there’s a lot of support for this
suggestion. (Laughter.) I don’t know the answer. Pat, do you know the
answer? (Laughter.)
UNDER SECRETARY KENNEDY: The answer is at the moment, it’s an expense
question. We can --
QUESTION: It’s free. (Laughter.)
UNDER SECRETARY KENNEDY: Nothing is free. (Laughter.) It’s a question
of the resources to manage multiple systems. It is something we’re
looking at. And thanks to the Secretary, there is a significant
increase in the 2010 budget request that’s pending for what is called
the Capital Investment Fund, by which we fund our information
technology operations. With the Secretary’s continuing pushing, we’re
hoping to get that increase in the Capital Investment Fund. And with
those additional resources, we will be able to add multiple programs
to it.
Yes, you’re correct; it’s free, but it has to be administered, the
patches have to be loaded. It may seem small, but when you’re running
a worldwide operation and trying to push, as the Secretary rightly
said, out FOBs and other devices, you’re caught in the terrible bind
of triage of trying to get the most out that you can, but knowing you
can’t do everything at once.
SECRETARY CLINTON: So we will try to move toward that. When the White
House was putting together the stimulus package, we were able to get
money that would be spent in the United States, which was the
priority, for IT and upgrading our system and expanding its reach. And
this is a very high priority for me, and we will continue to push the
envelope on it. I mean, Pat is right that everything does come with
some cost, but we will be looking to try to see if we can extend it as
quickly as possible.
It raises another issue with me. If we’re spending money on things
that are not productive and useful, let us know, because there are
tens of thousands of people who are using systems and office supplies
and all the rest of it. The more money we can save on stuff that is
not cutting edge, the more resources we’ll have to shift to do things
that will give us more tools. I mean, it sounds simplistic, but one of
the most common suggestions on the sounding board was having better
systems to utilize supplies, paper supplies – I mean, office supplies
– and be more conscious of their purchasing and their using.
And it reminded me of what I occasionally sometimes do, which I call
shopping in my closet, which means opening doors and seeing what I
actually already have, which I really suggest to everybody, because
it’s quite enlightening. (Laughter.) And so when you go to the store
and you buy, let’s say, peanut butter and you don’t realize you’ve got
two jars already at the back of the shelf – I mean, that sounds
simplistic, but help us save money on stuff that we shouldn’t be
wasting money on, and give us the chance to manage our resources to do
more things like Firefox, okay?