FBI Boosts Servers For Faster Criminal Searches 90
coondoggie writes "The Federal Bureau of Investigation's Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Division has awarded Lockheed Martin a $16 million contract to upgrade its central repository for criminal justice information services. 'The CJIS division operates national-level crime data systems that furnish name checks, fingerprints, criminal history data and other information to law enforcement officials. Keeping its systems on the leading edge should help CJIS with its goal of delivering getting timely and relevant criminal justice information to the FBI and all others in the law enforcement community. The new and upgraded servers will be part of the FBI's Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System.'"
16 million here, 100 million there... (Score:5, Informative)
In seriousness, speeding the results of criminal checks is a useful goal. Now all we need to do is make sure that the databases are filled with the correct information, and we'll be all set.
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The police just had their servers boosted by the FBI, and are therefore running round in confusion.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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I don't know why this guy got modded Troll
Is this Rev4 or Rev5 of CJIS many millions ... (Score:2)
FBI management as good as most (thank god not all) management
in most governments.
National Whitehouse to local doghouse DemRep... management
can spend money and make stupid and irresponsible decisions.
Elected or appointed the bosses are vindictive losers and
petty fools. The pack-mules and worker-bees in the field
and cubical are the sources of all performance and success
from which the show-dogs take credit.
I remember reading about many different big mu
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Plus, who doesn't love those MIB suits? And their stylish, matching pistols?
News? (Score:5, Insightful)
Is a lousy $16 million contract news? Give me a break. Most big companies sneeze $16 million in IT expenses every day.
Cut the political and "big-brother-gonna-get-ya" crap, editors. This is a complete non-story. They are upgrading. Gosh. Nobody ever does that. And how many Slashdot stories ridiculed the FBI for spending billions on their failed IT re-alignment?
Stop the Boogey-Man stories and let's talk Nerd.
Moe
Re:Damn straight! (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, they've been involved in some Constitutionally sketchy stuff. But a lot of their work *IS* really catching ordinary criminals. Not even terrorists or keeping files on "political" people. People who break into houses, rob and kill; serial killers; escaped prisoners, etc.
-b.
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Re:Damn straight! (Score:5, Funny)
Only those with something to hide pay them any attention.
Said like only an Anonymous Coward could!
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(sarcasm noted BTW)
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Most big companies sneeze $16 million in IT expenses every day. Cut the political and "big-brother-gonna-get-ya" crap, editors. This is a complete non-story.
Excuse me Moe, but what the fuck are you talking about? What "political crap"? I've read the summary twice (just the summary, mind, I can't be bothered to actually read the article), and I didn't see any sort of political content at all.
And just out of curiosity, how many million $ do you think it should take for a story like this to make the front page?
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The "political crap" is directly under the summary, ie: in the tags and replies.
MODS. (Score:2)
Not as impressive as 16 million, but sneezed... (Score:2)
Watch out... (Score:1)
Lockheed Martin? (Score:3, Interesting)
But then, perhaps they are more diverse than I thought.
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Furthermore they specialize in hand building purposed hardware. This is not at all what the FBI needs.
If they said sun took the contract I wouldn't be surprised, but Lockheed? I suspect their getting this contract had more to do with their experience with acquiring government contracts than it does with them actually being the right people for the job.
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Pimp my jail ride (Score:1)
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I think those have to be destroyed by local authorities at age 18 and only kept locally (at least per most states' minor privacy laws).
-b.
Not a bad thing ... (Score:4, Insightful)
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And what do you bet that having a background check done won't lower your FBI "credit rating", and make the agents go "Hah, this guy has been background checked twice before -- where there's smoke, there's fire!"?
Besides, background checks is based on the view that people are inherently evil or good, and that someone's past can be reliably used to predict the future. This is complete bullshit, of course, but self-propagating bullshit. In cou
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Well, if you happen to look like a certain felon, and your fingerprints don't match those at any of the crime scenes ... You'd want to be exonerated as quickly as possible, no?
-b.
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No, I much prefer not to be apprehended in the first place, and that the feds arrest more perpetrators and fewer suspects.
Regards,
--
*Art
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Mistakes happen -- not all incorrect arrests are malicious. It would be good if mistakes are able to be cleared as early as possible. Remember, being arrested and charged doesn't presuppose guilt.
-b.
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But even in the US, the majority of severe crimes are done by people without records. The solution isn't to expand the records until they include everyone.
AFIS, at least, isn't about expanding at all. As far as I know, there hasn't been a significant expansion of finger-print collecting practices other than the aliens-entering-the-us BS, which in terms of raw numbers, hasn't been that big of a deal.
This contract announcement is really a non-event. This AFIS system has been running for 10 years now and has had one round of hardware upgrades in that time. This is the second round because, in part, the hardware they are running on is going to move off HP's s
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Yes, you may look like Charles Manson but if you have the fingerprints of someone else you are free to go.
"Besides, background checks is based on the view that people are inherently evil or good"
No, it's based on the fact the authorities "do not know you from Adam" and the observation that ordinary people who actually do "have something to hide" become expert liars when dealing with the authorities.
Part of "the solution" is: STOP
Doh! - Broken link. (Score:2)
Re:Automated Fingerprint Identification System? (Score:5, Funny)
You can't fit 470 million fingerprints on an HD platter. There isn't enough clearance and the drive head plows into the fingerprint oil.
Re:Automated Fingerprint Identification System? (Score:4, Funny)
Clearly you don't rent DVD's from the same video library as me.
Why duplicate efforts? (Score:2)
(it's funny... laugh)
Chump change (Score:4, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nsa [wikipedia.org]
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Why did I just Guybrush Threepwood's voice in my head just then?
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If you're thinking of doing business with the KFC (Score:1)
(Sorry,couldn't resist. I lived next to one for three years)
boost = 'steal' (Score:2)
anyone else see the word 'boost' as 'steal' ?
maybe a better subject line could have been chosen.
(or, well, maybe you did mean that?)
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Nope.
'round here the most common use of the word boost is in reference to jump starting a car, as in:
"Hey, can ya give me a boost, my battery is dead"
Re:law enforcement (Score:4, Interesting)
And the solution is very simple: abolish plea bargaining and require a speedy jury trial on anything that anyone is charged with. If the State actually has to try all charges, the practice of charging people guilty of minor offenses with everything on the books that MIGHT stick will stop very rapidly.
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Government officials should be investigated, charged and prosecuted by a separate disinterested party that can not be threatened or influenced by government officials.
The failure by Fairfax County Virginia DA Robert Horan is a prime example. He recently refused to charge 2 cops that killed unar
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You don't WANT criminal conviction to be easy. And plea bargaining has another unintended effect: it causes people to plead guilty to stuff that they didn't do. Let's say if you were falsely arrested for murder, and didn't have money for an attorney other than a public defender. "You can either cop to manslaughter and get 10 years, or we try you for murder and there's a
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Hide them in plain site (Score:2)
(CJIS) Division today awarded Lockheed Martin a $16 million contract to upgrade its Hewlett Packard Superdome Unix servers.
That ensures that FEMA will never find them w/o help from Anderson Cooper.
the FBI's image (Score:2)
But when I think of the FBI, I don't see them that way. I see an orgnization that appears to be a threat to my privacy and basic rights and fredoms. I don't think this is how it should be, but there it is. So things like this just worry me more.
I don't see the FBI getting better at what they do as
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Compared to local police I think I trust them more, not less.
Just narrow the search to DC (Score:2)
Boosted (Score:1)
I thought Lockheed Martin builds weapon systems? (Score:2)
Since when do they do IT?
Re:I thought Lockheed Martin builds weapon systems (Score:2)
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Lookup versus search (Score:2, Interesting)
The first can use regular indexes, while the second requires high-end hardware and probably mass sequential searches for nation-wide searches. Plus,
I guess Google Wouldn't Take the Contract (Score:2)
faster? (Score:1)
Probably Java's Fault (Score:3, Informative)
Everywhere the police complain about the speed and most likely blame the FBI. Too bad they can't see the slow software running in their own state IT departments. Speed and storage (3 years of transactions need to be on file and searchable) are what are suffering now - even if the FBI did all libXML + C for everything they still have a bunch of Java clients connecting and taking their sweet old time downloading data.
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I am only a troll to you because I spoke out against the Java-religion.
I offer this to you in rebuttal: Aesop
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I can only say what I hear. "How come this stuff is slower than Cobol on a mainframe?" Part of the reason is XML but those that use XML with C do not have the same degradation of performance. Those that use Java are struggling.
You don't have to believe it if you don't want to. Yet there it is like a fisherman holding an extinct fish... like that would ever happen.
You want more secutiy for your servers? (Score:1)
Do not allow these servers to be in contact with any computers on the net. Install updates and software manually. Withdraw information via hardcopies (portable harddrives, flashdrives, etc...) if you need them on computers also connected to the tubes. In the meantime, get your important data off the web.
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Never happen. The Internet is just too damned convenient, not to mention cheap. The fact that everything you send over it is vulnerable to one degree or another doesn't seem to matter to some people.
From a security perspective, they'd be better off on dial-up.
Upgrades (Score:1)
Government and good IT spending just doesn't happen.
From TFA: (Score:1)
Not expected to be complete until 2001, The FBI says Sentinel will deliver an electronic information management system...
Seems counter productive (Score:1)
Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
At that time there were two things going on. First was the box that sat in the back of the computer room with all sorts of encryption hardware and it's own frame-relay connection. This was to allow us to connect to the CJIS network. The second part was the Interstate Identification Index.
In the past the FBI used to hold all fingerprint records. What they did with the advent of Automated Fingerprinted Identification Systems (AFIS) is push the burden onto the states. Rhode Island uses Connecticuts AFIS. But the criminal history dips hit that CJIS network to see if an active record in any state exists and then returns the information. This is also based on positive matches on a ten-print scan.
But here is where it gets interesting. The criminal history database was housed on an IBM RS/6000 under Oracle. To get our III data to the FBI we had to do an export. Well, the tapes and tape drives we had were of the Metal-Oxide variety and the FBI couldn't read the tapes. We ended up burning a set of 6 CD's with all the data they'd requested.
But we've long been told of the charlie-foxtrot that FBI and IRS systems became, but I've worked with many CJIS folks and they were competent people.