The White House diagram was ‘shared with more than 11,000 people’
The US public service agency for many years is said to have shared many sensitive documents, including the White House diagram, with more than 11,000 employees.

The US Public Service Agency (GSA) under the Joe Biden administration and the incumbent government of President Donald Trump shared a Google Drive folder containing many sensitive documents of the Government with 11,200 employees,Washington PostOn April 20 reported, leading the internal records they had access.
This Google Drive folder has a dossier of the White House Map, which is likely to be considered a confidential document, detailed information about the anti -bomb door proposed to be installed for the White House reception place, as well as the bank account information of one party who supports the press conference of the Trump administration.
The Washington Post added that “9 out of 15 files in the Google Drive folder are marked as CUI (information is not confidential documents but needs to be controlled)”. According to the records, at least 10 files allow GSA staff to view and edit the content.
The sharing of these documents of GSA is said to start taking place since 2021, when President Biden took office and continued until the current Trump administration. The last information sharing was last week.
The White House, GSA and the representative of Mr. Biden have not responded to the information request for information.
A long -time official of GSA said the agency uses software to scan the Google Drive folders to detect the inappropriate shared file and lock them. GSA also organizes compulsory training sessions for employees about how to share documents and privacy, according to this employee.
Experts say whether the White House diagram is considered a confidential document depending on whether they state detailed information and secret designs or security processes. However, the incident shows that the US government needs to strengthen security training measures for officials.
“These documents are absolutely not what you want to share for 11,200 people. The danger from these mistakes is a challenge for all governments,” Michael Williams, a professor specializing in studying security and defense issues at the University of Syracuse.
The US media on April 20 quoted unnamed sources of the problem that Defense Minister Pete Hegseth shared the Houthi armed air strike plan in Yemen in a private chat group on Signal, including his wife and close people, in the middle of the month.
Information about the Signal chat group of Minister Hegseth was published less than a month after the scandal of Atlantic’s editor -in -chief was mistakenly added to the chat group of US officials about the Houthi ambush campaign. National Security Adviser Mike Waltz then took responsibility for this negligence.