This is cybercic, a horrible hack for LaTeX which is used in concert with the cyber package to make documents with annotations of compliance with information assurance (IA) requirements. "cic" stands for Controls in Contents, and when you include this package, some notations of compliance are added to section names as seen in the table of contents of the final document. For example, United States Department of Defense Instruction 8500.2 contains about 150 requirements ("IA controls") which apply to automated information systems like servers and networks. Those inside the Department who want to set up a new system must write documents showing how the system complies with the requirements, so that administrators will know how to configure it, and auditors can satisfy themselves that it complies with the requirements. One such requirement, DCSS-1, states that "system initialization, shutdown, and aborts" must be "configured to ensure that the system remains in a secure state." If you write a section \section{State Changes}, which is numbered 2.2 when the document is built, and you use iadoc to notate in your text that you comply with DCSS-1, like \implements{iacontrol}{DCSS-1}, and you have a table of contents, the entry for 2.2 will look like "2.2 State Changes---DCSS-1." Because of the obscene macro hackery involved, it doesn't work if you have any macros inside your section titles, like \texttt or \emph. cybercic is released under the MIT license; see the file named LICENSE.