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I'm pretty surprised about the notability question. While this article could use a lot of work, DISA STIGs are pretty notable by both Wikipedia's definition and everyone else's. It is very prominent within the U.S. Government and especially military. In fact its use is mandatory in many cases. A quick search on google will show both how popular and numerous 3rd party references. Luisnunez (talk) 17:17, 19 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]

I agree. STIGs are not just notable in US government and DoD but also in commercial security sectors. The guides can be used for security hardening in may different regulated segments of the critical infrastructure. Rglennpascual (talk) 01:58, 7 October 2014 (UTC)[reply]
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  • Resources[edit]
  1. NIST Security Configuration Checklists Repository
  2. Security Technical Implementation Guides and Supporting Documents in the Public Area
         This links to http://iase.disa.mil/stigs/Pages/index.html, which leads to a 
         404 error (page not found).  On a similar url path: 
         http://iase.disa.mil/stigs/Pages/index.aspx, this does exist.
         The link to disa.mil is referenced twice: also under "Tools"
  • Tools[edit]
 1. DoD General Purpose STIG, Checklist, and Tool Compilation CD
         This links similarly to the above link with the path:  http://iase.disa.mil/stigs 
         which redirects to: http://iase.disa.mil/stigs/Pages/index.aspx
 2. Online STIG search