If there is such an archive, or some approximation thereof, it would surely be fascinating to pore over it.
> there's no reason for the public at large to need it
As a member of said public, I would be curious to know. There's no need for taxpayer-funded agencies to operate in a cloak of darkness.
Most everything done by government should by default be open to the public, with an exceedingly high bar that must be met to be otherwise. Otherwise, you run into nonsensical things like how some details around the assassination of a president 60 years ago are still classified on "national security" grounds.
EDIT: Reply here with a link to your Muckrock.com FOIA request and I'll send you the $5.
I'm also the sort of person who thinks that all code written with public money should be open source.
It's pretty obvious that the people who managed to extend the lifetime of Voyager are very smart, based on all the tricks they had to do.
They are remotely configuring an old-tech device that is billions of kilometers away, with insane lag, and uncertainty that the underlying hardware is even responding properly.
Absolutely anything could have gone wrong at this stage.
They'll anyway investigate internally what happened, in order to hopefully, find a solution.
There is no need to spend resources to make the material public, if the goal is mostly to satisfy curiosity (though it's interesting).
Of course there are operational details that we don't need to be made aware of, but for an incident as big as this there's no reason to at least know how it happened and what could be changed to prevent it from happening again.
Do you want the military to “work efficiently” if that means little to no oversight? How about Congress?
Oversight and accountability to the citizenry is a foundational principle in a functioning democracy.
But that value is not zero, and replacing it costs quite a bit - both money and time. Asking how and why this happened is a valid inquiry.
Saying that and then countering with your own.
Yeah, the pen dropping is a bit over the top, but as of now the claim is that this situation is planed for and will resolve itself. A report now wont tell us anything of significance. It will get interesting if the realignment fails.
> Oversight and accountability to the citizenry is a foundational principle in a functioning democracy.
I don't see micromanagement in that list.
- NASA informs the public immediately, and then makes the details available later after they've had time to compile the news and information into a format useful for the public
- NASA waits to inform the public until said report is finished
or perhaps you're after option c:
- NASA's network drives are open to the www in read-only mode, because, you know, 'open by default' entails realtime information (even though he doesn't actually care 99.9999% of the time. yet, someone should deliver this functionality, without it costing the taxpayer extra).
NASA routinely makes a LOT of data open to the public. Like, you can get very detailed JWST data directly from NASA. Probably far more detailed than you'd ever care to, because NASA does care about exactly your concern.
Actually, many agencies publish very detailed data if you care to look.
For science, I would want to do an enquiry anyway - I'm just commenting on the financial/accountability aspect.
This is what the Freedom of Information Act is for:
https://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong/FOIA/request.html
The report may not exist yet, so you may need to wait.
Is micromanaging what you're claiming is a strawman in my position? I'm not claiming you are saying the military doesn't need oversight, I'm probing with a concrete example where you draw the line on what constitutes a reasonable threshold of accountability. Note my statements were framed as questions to get clarification; that's not a strawman.
Your micromanaging claim is however another strawman statement. I guess I could use clarification on your point. Your equating to micromanaging is misapplied IMO. "Micromanaging" would be a direct democratic vote on most or all issues, IMO. That's not what's being asked for here here. What seems to be asked for is transparency. Access to information is not the same as having authority to make all decisions. But it is paramount in a government when people elect representatives who make decisions (or appoint those who do). The big issue I'm asking is: where is the reasonable 'trust, no need to verify' stance when it comes to public/govt work? Can we just trust tens of millions of dollars on construction projects, but not when it gets to hundreds of millions? What about aerospace? Do we say it's fine to go ahead with limited accountability when it comes to billion-dollar robotic missions, but not when there's a safety-critical application?
>A report now wont tell us anything of significance.
What makes you so confident? A report can tell us if processes were followed appropriately and, if not, if anyone was held accountable for not following them. I'd say that is pretty significant if you care about governmental fraud, waste, and abuse.
But do you have reason to believe they're working on a detailed public report?
Because if they're not, then you missed option "NASA informs the public immediately, but never makes the details available" which would be unfortunate.
Also they probably already answered a lot of these questions internally during the last week, so it wouldn't hurt to put some of that information out.