CIA Details Its Wikipedia-Like Tools For Analysts 164
hhavensteincw writes "If you think selling Web 2.0 in your organization is hard, some early backers of a Wikipedia-like project at the Central Intelligence Agency were called traitors and told they 'would get someone killed' by their efforts. But Intellipedia — the CIA's version of Wikipedia — now is so heavily used by analysts that the agency is using it in its security briefings, according to two of the CIA employees who work on the project. Intellipedia has been expanded since it was first launched so that now it boasts its own YouTube-like channel for video and Flickr-like photo sharing as well as a wiki where workers can debate different intel information."
I guess (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I guess (Score:5, Funny)
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Article: No WMDs in Iraq (Score:5, Funny)
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I guess that means DubyaBushJr articles are not very reliable then?
Re:I guess (Score:5, Insightful)
Efficiency in dissemination is just as important as accuracy. Getting accurate information earlier to more people can save everyone a lot of trouble.
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Re:I guess (Score:4, Insightful)
True enough, but there are systems in place to mitigate the possibility of inaccurate information. Their wiki is based off of the Wikipedia engine, so they should still have the ability to provide citations (I guess in their case it would be where the intel came from and whether or not the source was reliable.). Edit histories, the ability to revert changes, they should have all of these features. At worst it would be as if the wiki didn't exist, and the intel would still be just as questionable (not that the wiki makes the intel any more credible, it would just be more centralized and up-to-date) as it might've been before.
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Ok, for one thing I said they have the ability to provide citations, not that they necessarily do or do not. Secondly, you don't seriously believe that they currently have all these files just sitting around with no notes about where the information came from do you? I have a hard time believing that they don't have some kind of documentation about about their intel, even if it is something along the lines of "Interrogated shady character A, who confessed to X, Y, and Z regarding topic B." All I'm saying
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You forget that the 'analyst's are analyzing - not just taking information at face value...
Simplicity is not always good - particularly if founded upon false assumptions.
It is vital, in fact (Score:5, Insightful)
Had there been efficient dissemination of the information, it is possible some analyst would have put it all together and then been able to generate a report that would be acted on.
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Well, all those little fragments ended up doing no good.
So, in response, we've spent billions and billions of dollars and lots of and lots of street cred gathering up MORE little fragments.
While two hackers in the basement of the Farm put together a wiki for practically nothing.
Those guys ARE traitors, it's not that they might get someone killed - they cut the military-industrial-complex out of the loop, preventing them from making more profits than the oil industry...
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Re:It is vital, in fact (Score:5, Interesting)
It took a clusterfuck of epic proportions to change the way the alphabet agencies related to one another.
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The comments of Master Tubesteak did not in any way imply the bettering of any institution. He asserts change, which in and of itself is quite a feat for the behemoth we know as the Federal Government.
The thing about revolution, Master Coward (what an annoying pseudonym you have chosen, and you post so much--do you do anything besides wag your wattle here?) is that the rebels do not know whe
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Accuracy without efficient dissemination is useless.
Efficient dissemination without accuracy is useless.
Each is just as potentially destructive as the other and choosing between the two is not really an option.
Re:I guess (Score:5, Insightful)
At the expense of sounding slightly ridiculous, imagine how much mileage they're going to get out of the "What links here" function!?
If they use it correctly (and the weakest link here is the prompt input of information) then I can't see this not being anything but good.
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What better than a massive hyperlinked encyclopedia-like information repository for this?
I believe Mr. Cheney is quite satisfied with his man-sized office safe, thank you.
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RTFA (Score:5, Informative)
"We are not typically dealing with facts," he noted. "We are dealing with puzzles and mysteries. Everyone in the community is working on something of vital national security importance. We want to get to the point in the intelligence community where everyone is contributing their knowledge to Intellipedia."
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(Ward Christensen wrote Xmodem)
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"You're right, June. Why don't you go do some shopping and relax. I'll just stay here and pack fudge with the boys."
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But in general, it means people who might pick up bits and pieces of things here and there, and might usually even discard it seeing it as unimportant, will be more likely to potentially link that into other bits of information via this. Discussion and 'debates' over intel and the way it fits could also mean ever
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Oh Boy.... (Score:1, Funny)
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Re:Oh Boy.... (Score:5, Informative)
It's actually a very good collaboration tool, as normally cross-department/cross-agency work is almost non-existant, and when the information does get passed along, it's too old to be useful. Also, things like streaming UAS feeds are often on there as well, as sometimes other agencies are better at imageint than the ones taking the pictures.
- sF (...somewhere in Iraq.)
It makes a lot of sense... (Score:5, Insightful)
The CIA also doesn't have to worry about vandalism- no one is going to blank a page and replace it to the word "penis" when every edit is tied to their name... plus, being in the CIA is serious work, so I'd imagine the maturity level is higher anyways.
Re:It makes a lot of sense... (Score:4, Informative)
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Choosing wikipedia as a model is a great idea. Its like someone in a meeting actually had some worthwhile input when they asked "how can we improve communication?" - "how about we use a modern tool that has essentially revolutionized how factual information is disseminate
WIKI is an acronym for "What I Know Is" (Score:5, Interesting)
I suppose double agents are more mature than that. For me, the whole wiki concept clashes with the need to know concept. It makes no sense for an organization like the CIA to make every information they have available to anyone inside the organization.
If I were doing something like that, I would make sure to at least have every submission vetted by someone above the submitter in the hierarchy.
Re:WIKI is an acronym for "What I Know Is" (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sure it's still on a need-to-know basis. The article states that anyone with access to certain networks can read the wiki, but there is authorization involved with making edits. I'm also sure that their wiki follows their pre-existing rules about who can access what information, they're not going to suddenly dump a lot of top-secret information into a wiki that everyone has access to.
Re:WIKI is an acronym for "What I Know Is" (Score:5, Interesting)
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Interesting. Of course, just because one article is marked as non-classified doesn't mean they all are. I also find it interesting that whoever took the screenshot is using Firefox and del.icio.us ;-) I guess I shouldn't be too surprised though given IE's security track record.
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You're right, but they might have adapted the Wikimedia PHP code to be able to restrict access based on authentication. I have no idea how, maybe they do it by namespace or something like that. But since they have the source they can certainly do it.
I'd be surprised if there's total access over the whole t
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6 feet under some cave in pakistan?
if he was alive he would have released another video by now.
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Those things take forever!
Ol' bin should have saved his cash and just paid for the repairs flat out.
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"What I Know Is" is only a backronym [wikipedia.org]
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Jay: I am the master of the C.L.I.T.! Remember this fucking face, whenever you see C.L.I.T. you'll see this fucking face. I make that shit WORK! It does whatever the fuck I tell it to. No one rules the C.L.I.T like me. Not this little fuck, none of you little fucks out there. I AM THE C.L.I.T. COMMANDER! Remember that, commander of all C.L.I.T.s! When it comes down to business, this is what I do. I pinch it l
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Here come the edit wars.... (Score:5, Funny)
Mod parent up (Score:2)
BANHAMMER TIME (Score:5, Funny)
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Wikipedia has a screenshot (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Wikipedia has a screenshot (Score:5, Funny)
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I could swear the CIA had laws about separating their network from the internet. I mean for obvious reasons!
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The wikis are not open to the public.
Maybe this was it. The entry is not accurate. Imagine that!
Those networks are nowhere near the public networks.
'Nuff said.
qz
of course (Score:1)
of course, the CIA would expect this and maybe it's just a honeypot.
i really don't know how people do this line of work without becoming obsessive-compul
Re:Wikipedia has a screenshot (Score:5, Interesting)
"><script>alert(document.cookie);</script><input type="hidden" "
The requests are blocked if they don't have a valid request ID, so you don't seem to be able send people to the page and have it load a script that will steal their cookies or whatever, but it's still a little disturbing to see that even this much is possible.
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CowboyNeal, we demand answers!
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Re:Wikipedia has a screenshot (Score:5, Funny)
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Better to let the chinese hackers figure it out and keep it to themselves...
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So? (Score:2)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Intellipedia_shovel.jpg [wikipedia.org]
"I dig Intellipedia! It's wiki wiki, Baby"
Ahem...
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Remember, this is the CIA we're talking about (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, right, 'collegiality'. That bit about seeing 'where a person works and where their interests lie' sounds a lot like a threat to me.
Don't edit my Intellipedia article, college boy. I can kill
workers can debate different intel information (Score:2)
Their paranoia is, "If we cane make up these insane monstrous plots then others will too".
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get someone killed? (Score:2)
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So... Wikipedia and Intellipedia... (Score:5, Funny)
the most inflammatory and highly rated comment (Score:2)
go for it!
WP: Self promotion (Score:2)
Everybody's doing it. (Score:2, Interesting)
Like always, the mother of all wiki's [wikipedia.org] provides plenty of information on the subject. (and even a screenshot!)
huge gain in efficiency gathering data (Score:2)
I do know that it's a great tool for an intranet-- especially when there are disparate sources from separated teams. The only common conduit they have is the common information. The best thing about a wiki as we all know-- and thank God the CIA gets this: is that file struc
Hmm.. (Score:4, Funny)
All that needs said (Score:5, Interesting)
Legacy of Ashes, listening to this in the car right now. Holy shit, the way the CIA operates, it reminds me of my time at a dot.com. Seriously. You have these unwarranted and outsized egos combined with dick-all knowledge of espionage and intelligence-gathering. The same pitiful fuck story that we've read about with Iraq is pretty much the way the CIA operated throughout its entire existence.
Just reading about the idiots in charge is enough to make my teeth hurt. I worked for exactly the same sort of people at dot.coms but hey, ignorance and hubris don't get people killed in the dot.com world. In the spy world, having Soviet agents throughout your organization feeding secrets back home will get people killed. We sent in thousands of agents to infiltrate Soviet-occupied Europe, Korea, China, all of them killed because our organization was compromised. We parachute people in, the secret police are waiting for them on the ground. We get top-level moles in the USSR? Fucking American turncoats sell them out and they get the firing squad. And the CIA directors continue to lie to the President, not that presidents throughout the Cold War were going to disagree when they were told exactly what they asked to hear instead of what they needed to hear, etc etc.
Our government is so fucking incompetent, it's almost like the Russians deserved to win. Our only saving grace was that the Soviet system was more hatefully backward and ignorant than the one we were running. Since the fall of the USSR, our government seems to be desperately seeking to close the stupidity gap.
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Some Current Posts (Score:5, Funny)
Anyone? Need some direction on this. (fieldofficerfred 9/8/00, imported from file)
Hello? (fieldofficerfred 2/23/01, imported from file)
We're listening. How can we make this suit our needs? (pwolfawitz, rrumsfeld, dcheney 9/10/01, imported from file)
Saddam's a softer target. Hang on. (dcheney 10/25/02, imported from file)
Saddam? Iran is refining uranium! With all due repsect, what the fuck are you guys thinking? (fieldofficerfred 11/26/02, imported from file)
Don't question my authority to not know what I may or may not know that I know. You're fired. (rrumsfeld 1/8/03, imported from file)
Hey, did you guys know Iran was refining uranium? (rrumsfeld (deprecated) 11/16/07)
Iran has offered to accept the delivery of peaceful fissile material and a shutdown of their own refineries in exchange for guarantees from Europe that they won't allow the US to attack them. (gathered from the AP 5/2/08)
Disregard that. We will not allow Europe to negotiate with extremists on the other side. Iran is the greatest threat to America and the known universe, second only to waxy buildup and auto erotic asphyxiation. (dcheney 5/4/08)
Iran continues to refine uranium as they see it as their only diplomatic leverage and hope to prevent the United States from invading. (gathered from the AP 5/29/08)
IRAN HAS NUKES. [citation needed] JESUS TOLD ME TO ATTACK AT DAWN!!!!!!!!1111 [citation needed] (gwbush 8/5/08)
Mer mer mer attack at dawn, mer mer mer. (dcheney 8/5/08)
What's next..... (Score:2, Funny)
CIAleakie - to post 'lost' secrets.
Wikillyou - where assassins can discuss tricks of the trade.
Intellipedia stubs (Score:5, Funny)
This article is a stub. You can help Intellipedia by expanding it.
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History repeats itself (Score:2)
I wonder if they have layers of data such that only people with certain clearances can see c
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How high should you make internal barriers to free exchange of information? It comes down to a trade-off: are you more worried about missing an imminent threat, or are you more worried about the bad guys stealing your intel?
Like many things in intel/military, I think this trade-off has shifted
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I don't think the fear was only that the other guys would have a mole inside the organization. There is also the fear that the fact that we know something can get out accidently (press release, loose talk, etc.) and the other guys will know we have an asset. The leak could be something like the briefing papers left on the tube the other day in London where someone jus
Collaboration is a four letter word? (Score:2)
"We still call spies collaborators," he noted. "We're trying to encourage collaboration, but there is still a negative connotation with that word."
This quote floored me. My god, does it explain a lot about 9/11 intelligence failures.
Re:Collaboration is a four letter word? (Score:4, Insightful)
An agent, especially a covert one, needs to have a very clear sense of moral superiority over both enemies and his own sources/helpers (aka collaborators, spies, traitors, freelancers, what have you). If (s)he doesn't, (s)he might turn, be turned, or just abandon the game in disgust.
The guy making that comment has (or affects) zero notion of field work.
Revert him. (Score:2)
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The CIA wants you to believe that wiki is safe and secure. Sure it is. The CIA does "wiki", so it must be secure. Other organizations -- FSB, PLA, DGSE, Mossad, and the entire Fortune 500 -- should all adopt wikis. It'll be great. Everyone will be really productive and secure. But what if wiki isn't secure? What if MediaWiki has security holes? What if wikis make it is easier to spy? What if the CIA wants a backdoor into FSB, PLA, DGSE, Mossad, and the entire Fortune 500? Then what? HUH?!
Chill. First off MediaWiki is open-source so if you are so paranoid just look up the source code. If we are on the topic of security whats to say that the CIA hasn't already broken many encryption schemes used today? It is a lot more probable that the CIA has busted encryption algorithms then it is that they are injecting backdoors to open-source projects.