Force readiness assessments
Identifies documents containing references to force readiness assessments in Australian contexts. This information type is classified as personally identifiable information under the Privacy Act 1988.
- Type
- regex
- Engine
- boost_regex
- Confidence
- medium
- Confidence justification
- category-aware structural regex with anchor and context constraints replaces phrase-only detection.
- Detection quality
- Mixed
- Jurisdictions
- global
- Regulations
- AML/CTF Act (Cth), IPA 2009 (Qld), NDB Scheme (Cth), Privacy Act 1988 (Cth)
- Frameworks
- ISO 27001
- Data categories
- government-id, pii
- Scope
- wide
- Platform compatibility
- Purview: Compatible, GCP DLP: Compatible, Macie: Compatible, Zscaler: Compatible, Palo Alto: Degraded, Netskope: Unsupported
Pattern
(?is)\b(?:force\s+readiness|readiness\s+assessment|operational\s+readiness|combat\s+readiness|defense\s+readiness|force\s+posture|capability\s+assessment|deployment\s+readiness|military\s+readiness|national\s+security|classified\s+assessment|ADF\s+readiness)\b
Corroborative evidence keywords
force readiness assessments, force, readiness, assessments, defense, intelligence, government, agency, department, ministry, public sector, civil service, welfare, social services, public administration, statutory authority, regulatory body, public servant, government program, public benefit (+1 more)
Proximity: 300 characters
Should match
force readiness— Primary topic phrase matchreadiness assessment— Case-insensitive topic phrase matchoperational readiness— Alternative topic phrase matchcombat readiness— Additional topic phrase match
Should not match
unrelated generic text without domain phrases— No relevant topic phrases presentplaceholder value 12345— Random text should not match topic-specific regexclassified contingency— Generic word pair from old broad template should not match
Known false positives
- Common words and phrases related to force readiness assessments appearing in policy documents, training materials, HR templates, or compliance guidelines without actual personal data. Mitigation: Require corroborative evidence keywords within the proximity window to confirm sensitive data context rather than general discussion.
- In Australian English, similar terminology used in formal or administrative contexts (education, professional documentation) that does not constitute sensitive data collection. Mitigation: Layer with additional contextual signals such as structured identifiers, form fields, or database column headers to distinguish sensitive records from general references.
- High-frequency pattern matches in large document corpora due to broad regex anchors. Expected match rate is significantly higher than specific identifier patterns. Mitigation: Tune confidence thresholds for bulk scanning. Consider using this pattern primarily as a pre-filter with secondary validation.
References
- https://www.protectivesecurity.gov.au/
- https://www.defence.gov.au/business-industry/export/controls