Raytheon's Riot Program Mines Social Network Data For Intelligence Agencies 119
Shipud writes "Raytheon has secretly developed software capable of tracking people's movements and predicting future behavior by mining data from social networking websites according to The Guardian. An 'extreme-scale analytics' system created by Raytheon, the world's fifth largest defense contractor, can gather vast amounts of information about people from websites including Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare. Raytheon says it has not sold the software — named Riot, or Rapid Information Overlay Technology — to any clients. But the company has acknowledged the technology was shared with U.S. government and industry as part of a joint research and development effort, in 2010, to help build a national security system capable of analyzing 'trillions of entities' from cyberspace. The power of Riot to harness popular websites for surveillance offers a rare insight into controversial techniques that have attracted interest from intelligence and national security agencies, at the same time prompting civil liberties and online privacy concerns."
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
YARNTDFB (Score:3)
Re:YARNTDFB (Score:4, Insightful)
Yet Another Reason Not To Do FaceBook.
And Twitter, Foursquare, and the rest of the so-called "social" web. Anyway, if they're interested in finding terrorists and whatnot, they should probably look elsewhere. If they're interested in picking up stuff to use against their own citizens (Stasi-style), then they're probably on the right track.
Re: (Score:2)
Well... what's there to prevent terrorists from using social networks?
Re: (Score:2)
I see your latter point as a valid concern.
Hell, it seems these days, all you need are to claim something is to combat child pr0n or terrorism, and voila, you've now acquired the keys to the Constitution and can squash any old rights you used to have. Having more info on the
Re: (Score:2)
So - how's this thing working on Chris Dorner?
Re: (Score:3)
It's not intended for people like Chris D.
It's intended to gauge the sentiments of the masses, to warn the local rulers before the uprising starts. I'm pretty sure they have a pretty good market in the Middle East right now. It doesn't do anything about lone killers or terrorists.
This reeks of "schleppnetzfahndung", a term used to describe the use of similar data by the West German police to combat terrorism in the 70's. It did catch a couple of terrorists. It also got tens of thousands of citizens banned f
Re: (Score:2)
It also got tens of thousands of citizens banned from working in all kinds of jobs, because they had the wrong friends, read the wrong papers or were members of the wrong trade union.
If you can be stopped from working somewhere for any of those reasons, your society is fucked. It's not surprising West Germany had so many terrorists in the 1970s if the state was treating legitimate dissent so fascistically.
Re:sample data (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Private data no, but I'm pretty sure that FB requires people to pay if they want to use spiders to get all the data that's been posted, rather than just small amounts about individuals.
Re: (Score:2)
It's an opt-in program (Score:1)
There seem to be eve- more compelling reasons not to use the social networks.
Re: (Score:1)
This is /., you can say "even" here. No profanity filters. Viva liberty!
do they mean (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Calculating statistically what a group might do
I believe you are referring to psychohistory from 'The Foundation' by Isaac Asimov.
I believe you are referring to the behavioral research of Skinner, Watson, Hull, Tolman, et. al.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
"Individual a big ask?" No. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Just don't post location data or activities if you're engaging in protests... disable location services on your phone. You're giving data to a public database and then crying about privacy... just don't give them information.
How can you be sure that everyone who's participating in that same protest followed your advice?
They don't need the information you post if they already have the information other people post about you.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:easy solution (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
disable location services on your phone
If you think that will help, you're clueless. And thus part of the vast majority and exactly the type this program targets. The only way to (probably) incapacitate the personal surveillance device (aka your cell phone) is to yank out the battery or better yet leave the whole god damn thing at home. Or never agree to carry one in the first place.
George Orwell will be saying "told you so". And Stalin will be drooling as this is his wet dream and something he always strived for but could never achieve.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Just don't post location data or activities if you're engaging in protests... disable location services on your phone. You're giving data to a public database and then crying about privacy... just don't give them information.
Indeed. Terrorists hide their activity from the authorities by concealing themselves within the populace. This is the first rule of asymmetric warfare. And it still holds, whether you are hiding within a city's population being surveilled by cameras operated by the authorities, or within the statistical bubble that the authorities are able to track via software like RIOT. The nature of the battles may change, but the nature of warfare doesn't.
Big Assumption (Score:2)
You are assuming here that you have complete and total control of your phone, completely impervious from overrides by the greasy carriers and their state security handlers.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Oh I forgot, a smartphone is the biggest ego-boosting gadget out there.
You're living in the past. They are no longer smartphones, they're just phones. And to boost your ego you'd need something not every seven year old has.
The consensus is that a tablet is expensive enough and big enough to have an excuse to show it at all times.
Re: (Score:2)
are our egos really that huge that we need to advertise where we are every time we take a photo?
Apparently, yes. No one forces people to upload their pics to facebook or whatever.
George Orwell got it wrong in 1984. You don't need goverment telescreens monitoring you, people seem quite happy to do it themselves voluntarily.
Oh no... (Score:2)
We're not supposed to fear our government. We're just crazies and whackos.
Anyone remember the RPG Paranoia? .gov wants you to be happy...
Failbork (Score:1)
Precrime! (Score:3)
The raging paranoid in me says this is a Very Bad Thing that will end up with politicians refusing to relinquish power by passing laws arresting people for 'crimes' they might commit based on this statistical analysis, followed up by lists of new 'crimes' demanding 'harsh penalties' covered by these same new laws. Aggrivated littering and felony loitering, anyone?
Re: (Score:1)
They already do that precrime stuff with people who possess child porn.
That's not pre-crime. It's crime. Having child porn doesn't just mean the viewer might abuse a child in the future. It also means a child was abused to create the images.
Re: (Score:2)
Seems more like Person of Interest [wikipedia.org] realm, and that show feels a lot more like something that could exist today than flukey telepaths being born. (Great show by the way, starts of slow but gets going!)
Oblig. (Score:2)
In Soviet Russia .....
No, sorry. I've got nothing to top this.
forest and tree analogy (Score:3, Interesting)
tracking people's movements and predicting future behavior
Time for a forest and tree analogy. On a rounding basis, the masses have historically never done anything terribly exciting, important, or relevant. So paying intense attention to them is a waste of resources. Its always the 10% or less who actually influence history. If we made all predictions based on the median joe 6 pack couch potato, we'd still be british subjects, we'd still be in control of independent south vietnam, iraq and afghanistan would be fully pacified, blah blah blah.
I don't think that knowing 30% of the population liked the most recent american idol episode is actionable intelligence information in either the short, medium, or long term. Imagine a squad about to deploy on a mission in Iraq being told that the best help intel can provide today is that 15% of active facebook users like listening to Bieber. Umm, thanks guys, on to the next briefing.
Its a self blinding technology, not an enlightening technology. I'm sure its highly profitable for contractors of course.
Re: (Score:3)
Actually, having a crystal clear picture of what the Great Swarm is doing provides an exquisitely crisp background against which one can pick out very fine details indeed when it comes to excursions from that background.
It's the excursions that they're looking for and keeping a close eye upon.
As the detail of the background becomes sharper and sharper, so too does detail of the excursions.
Re: (Score:2)
excursions from that background
But the excursions from the background are also not actionable data. Right back to my original example, OK the important part is not that 15% of the dirt villagers like Bieber, its that 85% actively dislike Bieber. Still not actionable because the subject of discussion is useless from a military tactical / strategic / logistic perspective.
I will say that you could see a meta-pattern of peoples behavior when they know they're being monitored. Like if you have people faking data, poorly, to make it look li
Re: (Score:3)
Welcome to 2013 - where the resources (to collect and process the data) may seem massive, but they're dirt cheap. The waste is far less than you seem to think.
True. And if you have a better way of finding the 10% than sifting through everyone looking for pointers to the
RIOT... (Score:2)
Cheaper to just ask my wife (Score:2, Funny)
I pretty much do the same things every day at more or less the same time. I have Sunday dinner at the same restaurant and order the same thing. Give her a calendar an time of day and she could predict my movements precisely.
Re: (Score:2)
Just curious..why are you living your whole life stuck in such a rut?
That would be so boring to me...I rarely eat the same thing within a 3-4 week period.
Do you not crave some variety?
Not putting you down...but just curious. I'm not familiar with someone that would go to one restaur
Re: (Score:2)
Interesting question. I notice that I tend to optimize my daily experiences and then minimize deviation from those experiences, so that when I find my favorite dish in a restaurant, I rarely order anything else. For example, I get Sunday dinner at a Vietnamese restaurant where I've gone for 16 years or so. I'm in there at 4:30 almost every Sunday. I always get Pho Ga. The time works for me because that's when I get back from the lakehouse and I get back at 4:30 to beat traffic, yet extend my stay. The soup
Re: (Score:2)
Thanks for the answer, interesting.
I find that I'm setting in my ways, somewhat in spite of myself.
As I'm aging, however, I'm actively trying to keep myself from doing that, and actively seeking out new experiences and new things best I can....hoping it keeps my mind younger and, hopefully, keeping from getting too close minded, and not to be yelling to 'get off my lawn' too often or too loudly.
I
Re: (Score:2)
Just curious..why are you living your whole life stuck in such a rut?
Alternatively, I could say that if the only interesting thing in your life is that you eat different foods every day, you are living in a superficial bubble.
I doubt that Einstein worried about whether he had potatoes three days in a row.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, I have some routine forced upon me, due to having to work for a living.
But outside of that, I do try to do something new and different as often as I can. I do think of food and cooking as HUGE part of my life, that I enjoy, so culinary speaking, I am always looking for new things to eat and cook.
But, I constantly look for new things to do, ne
R.I.O.T. sourcecode (Score:5, Funny)
while [ 1 ]; do
wget -q https://twitter.com/YourAnonNews -O
wget -q https://plus.google.com/117604887745850959716 -O
wget -q http://anonnews.org/ -O
egrep '(meetup|protest|flashmob|operation|torrent|TPB)'
sleep 300
done
Re: (Score:2)
I mean, do you really think they are waiting for the occasional plain text "I will explode this car bomb at 9pm at number 100 City Road, the car will be a blue Toyota" sort of message?
Re: (Score:2)
Linchpin theory ? (Score:1)
I know Linchpin theory is a lame reference, but this story does suggest its validity.
tldr: The Riot program can be used for social engineering, but social engineering can be used to render its inferences invalid and therefore dangerously unreliable.
Any chance this system can be used to trigger events, like, say, riots? Think about it. It's easy to observe social network and make statistical inferences about group behavior afk or not.
But that behavior is affected by the very data being measured; it is a de
Connect this to a live drone (Score:2)
and all of our problems are solved!
Am I in trouble yet? (Score:2)
No fb account, no twitter account, no google+ account (except for that default one they evidently made for me and keep telling me I should check).
When do they decide I'm an antisocial psychopath who gets bumped to the top of the watch lists?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No fb account, no twitter account, no google+ account (except for that default one they evidently made for me and keep telling me I should check).
When do they decide I'm an antisocial psychopath who gets bumped to the top of the watch lists?
Most political activists, protesters or terrorists are not antisocial. I imagine you might rate an interest if there's a spate of arson attacks or animal mutilations in your neighbourhood though.
Programmer ethics? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've often wondered about the programmers who write these software packages.
The stereotype programmer is young, bright, scientific, idealistic, and concerned for global issues.
And yet, big companies have no problem staffing teams to write the software for predator drones, Carnivore [wikipedia.org], Total Information Awareness [wikipedia.org], and other packages which are used to violate human rights.
Where do these "programmers of dubious character" come from?
Many programmers say (when I ask) that they have high moral standards - more so than (they say) the average person. And yet, they work on all sorts of sketchy things.
Can anyone explain the disconnect? Is there a level of "bravery" associated with morality (ie - I'm against *this*, but not willing to lose my job over it)? Are moral arguments here (for example) just blowing smoke?
Re:Programmer ethics? (Score:4, Informative)
Well, you have two data points. The existence of all sorts of software designed to take advantage of information easily available on the internet, and a 'feeling' that programmers possess some special moral character. The answer to this conflict is obvious.
The idea that programmers have some special moral character is nonsense.
Re: (Score:2)
A few years back, Raytheon recruited some of my friends by simply offering them 150% of their current salary at their current employer. That's difficult to say no to.
No, it's not. You either have a moral position towards something or you don't. If you think Raytheon are immoral, you shouldn't work for them. If your ethics can be bought by a pay rise, you are an unethical human being,
I agree that it is almost impossible to say "I don't believe in capitalism and the industrial-military complex, therefore I refuse to work for any sort of organisation that upholds that system" but there is still a difference between a company that makes widgets that may be used in cons
Tough question (Score:1)
Oppenhiemer (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, two different concepts there.
One mi
Re: (Score:2)
Most people work a job ONLY to earn money. So, you do what it takes to earn money.
That does not logically follow.
Unless you're in a situation where the alternative is starving to death, which is what capitalists would prefer, you always have a choice about what job you do.
Re: (Score:1)
Programmer, meet money and security. Plus great benefits. And a great resume builder with the possibility of being cushy for life.
Or... take your chances in the slave mines with other people and hope you don't get downsized at 35.
That's my guess.
or they just realize that if they pass on it someone else will just do the job instead
Re: (Score:2)
or they just realize that if they pass on it someone else will just do the job instead
That's also known as the "well someone was going to gas/bayonet the concentration camp victims to death anyway, so why shouldn't I do it?" defence. It doesn't wash.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, whenever I see I story like this I wonder to myself "How the hell can anyone work on this stuff and still sleep at night?" Either A. they don't realize that they're an active part of making the US a hellish dystopia, or B. really don't give a fuck about the world tomorrow and just want to get paid today.
Re: (Score:2)
The stereotype programmer is young, bright, scientific, idealistic, and concerned for global issues.
I expect a lot of Nazis were too.
I've no idea where you get your stereotype from.
Re: (Score:2)
They're not acting unethically; they're just acting according to a different set of ethics than yours
Moral relativism fails after a certain point. The Nazis didn't just have a "different set of ethics" from me, they were fucking monsters.
Re: (Score:2)
He's also looking for a challenge and dreads having to do boring routine work for a living.
Being a uniquely precious snowflake does not give you a Get Out Of Jail Free card when it comes to ethics.
So.... (Score:2)
Raytheon can track people who publish their GPS coordinates publicly on the Internet? OMG scary!
They're mining Foursquare. The POINT of Foursquare is to let people know where you are. By the way, how do I get fat defence contracts for writing trivial programs?
I am wondering (Score:1)
Naturally (Score:2)
It's just totally follows logically to think through what you could get if you would exploit just everything that people allow to leak online if you don't have to even LOOK as if you're caring for privacy or anything.
Seriously, it would be strange if something like that wouldn't exist. And of course as always YOU just need to be more cunning than THEM.
Real names (Score:1)
Raytheon doesn't do for free (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
We know what it's called. We also know with absolute certainty that no modern corporation does it without getting paid first, second, and probably third. What do you think this is, 1960?
market opportunity (Score:2)
there's an opportunity for anybody with some capital behind them to make an absolute killing selling phones that have no paper trail. cash or bitcoin. kind of like a legal black market.
kim dotcom? he's got reason to want to anonymize people again.
dissident activity requires anonymity. intel agencies should be worried that the path they are taking is going to force protest into a state that simply cannot be traced back to individuals. it's not too difficult to achieve, and if people follow simple rules
Re: (Score:2)
The strategic response to this type of stalking initiatives shall be known as the Unified Posting Yield Obfuscating Response System.
U missed one before Response there.
Re: (Score:2)
Of course they crawl & analyze Slashdot! Probably directly tap the DB, too. No doubt have been doing so for years. Bet there are some pretty cool algos crunching away on our posts. The surveillance state is the present not the future.
My approach is, try not to make any political comment on /. that I wouldn't be okay saying in public on the steps of City Hall. It is after all a public forum. I don't use an pseudonymous username, because I'm confident my actual identity would be discoverable regardl