Rob Dover: Putting the Steele into intelligence reform

#OSE Open Source Everything, Cultural Intelligence, Government, IO Sense-Making, Peace Intelligence
Rob Dover
Rob Dover

Putting the Steele into intelligence reform

Robert Steele is one of the more interesting writers on intelligence. Based in the US, and a former practitioner he has brought an enormous amount of energy to the questions around intelligence effectiveness and intelligence reform, and can rightly be thought of as a grandfather of the open source intelligence movement, and more recently the expanded “Open Source Everything” meme. I should insert the health warning that he has appeared in the Companion guide that Mike Goodman, Claudia Hillebrand and I edited, so I am not entirely impartial on this, but I would place myself as a ‘critical friend’ of his work.[i]

He has recently published a semi-manifesto piece about US intelligence and it can be found on this link. I have distilled the following key points from it, that I want to write around briefly here, but the original piece is where his take on these issues sit, obviously: 1) intelligence should be about decision support; 2) intelligence is currently being justified along the lines of the quantity of secrets it produces the Executive without regard to the total government need; 3) there is a dominant discourse that only secret intelligence agencies are equipped to ‘do’ intelligence; 4) Parliament and politicians in general desperately need intelligence qua decision-support, sense-making applied to all information secret and open that applies to their functional domains; and 5) the public desperately needs intelligence, again in the form of decision support.  Recently the public has become the object – Americans would say the target – of intelligence agencies, which is quite the opposite of the public being a virtual intelligence network in being, contributing to national and public security more effectively by leveraging the creative commons approach to information, what some call collective or co-intelligence.[ii]

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Berto Jongman: Bits, Bytes, & Stuff 1.6

Cultural Intelligence, Peace Intelligence
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

BOOK:  Religious Armed Conflict and Discrimination in the Middle East and North Africa: An Introduction

CYBER: Hook Analyser v3.0 malware analysis utility

CYBER: Space – the Final Frontier (for War)

CYBER: State of Russian monitoring & surveillance

DEA: DEA & DOJ Held Over 50 Secret Meetings with Cartels, in Violation of Agreements with Mexico, and Inclusive of Offering Arms & Cash for Information

LIFE: Digging for Lives — Russia's Volunteer Body Hunters

LIFE: Heat Map of World's Most Photographed Places

LIFE: Integral Life – The Fourth Turning

LIFE: Medication Transforms Roughest San Francisco School

Click on Image to Enlarge
Click on Image to Enlarge

NSA: 10 Myths Debunked — Opting Out is Not an Option

NSA: Subsidizing Foreign Intelligence Services Includes US-Only Space & US-Only Equipment – the Dutch Example

NSA: The Totalitarian Temptation

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Jean Lievens: Toward a Salutary Political Economy – Freedom from Jobs

Commercial Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence, Gift Intelligence, Peace Intelligence
Jean Lievens
Jean Lievens

Toward a Salutary Political-Economy – Freedom from Jobs

By Elliot Sperber

While gains have certainly been made toward a more inclusive, egalitarian society over the half-century since Martin Luther King delivered his iconic I Have a Dream Speech (as part of the March for Jobs and Justice in Washington, D.C.), in many respects – particularly in economic matters – there has been little or no progress at all.

Click on Image to Enlarge
Click on Image to Enlarge

Indeed, by certain measures equality has significantly diminished in the US. Accompanying a minimum wage that, when adjusted for inflation, is lower than it was in 1968, and wages that – except for the wealthy – haven’t risen in decades, the economy has polarized wealth to a greater degree than ever, reducing the economic classes more and more to two – rich and poor – and squeezing the middle and working classes into little more than a memory in the process. In among other places, this lack of change is observable in the fact that it’s five decades later and people are still talking about jobs – coveting jobs as though jobs were those necessities and luxuries that work is obtained to secure.

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Patrick Meier: Book Forthcoming on Digital Humanitarians

Collective Intelligence, Earth Intelligence, Peace Intelligence
Patrick Meier
Patrick Meier

Yes, I’m Writing a Book (on Digital Humanitarians)

I recently signed a book deal with Taylor & Francis Press. The book, which is tentatively titled “Digital Humanitarians: How Big Data is Changing the Face of Disaster Response,” is slated to be published next year. The book will chart the rise of digital humanitarian response from the Haiti Earthquake to 2015, highlighting critical lessons learned and best practices. To this end, the book will draw on real-world examples of digital humanitarians in action to explain how they use new technologies and crowdsourcing to make sense of “Big (Crisis) Data”. In sum, the book will describe how digital humanitarians & humanitarian technologies are together reshaping the humanitarian space and what this means for the future of disaster response. The purpose of this book is to inspire and inform the next generation of (digital) humanitarians while serving as a guide for established humanitarian organizations & emergency management professionals who wish to take advantage of this transformation in humanitarian response.

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David Swanson: Building a Global Movement to End All War

Cultural Intelligence, Peace Intelligence
David Swanson
David SwansonDavid

Building a Global Movement to End All War

I've been involved in starting enough activist campaigns and coalitions to know when one has more potential than any other I've seen.  When hundreds of people and organizations are signing up on the website before you've announced it anywhere, and nine months before you plan to officially launch, and when a large percentage of the people signing on ask how they can donate funding, and when people from other countries volunteer to translate your declaration into other languages, and when committees form of volunteer women and men to work on a dozen different aspects of the planning — and they actually get to work in a serious way, and when none of this is due to anything in the news or any statement from anyone in government or any contrast between one political party and another, then it's time to start thinking about what you're going to help build as a movement.

In this case I'm talking about a movement to end, not this war or that war, but the institution of war as an acceptable enterprise for the human species. The declaration of peace that people and groups are signing reads, in its entirety:

“I understand that wars and militarism make us less safe rather than protect us, that they kill, injure and traumatize adults, children and infants, severely damage the natural environment, erode civil liberties, and drain our economies, siphoning resources from life-affirming activities. I commit to engage in and support nonviolent efforts to end all war and preparations for war and to create a sustainable and just peace.”

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Berto Jongman: Bits, Bytes, & Stuff 1.3

Cultural Intelligence, Earth Intelligence, Peace Intelligence
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

AL-QAIDA: Fallujah – a Backlash?

CULTURE: French “Quenelle” the Jews

CULTURE: Lone Survivor and the Lack of Truth

Simply put, we have become an incredibly lazy society.  We want to be spoon-fed historical facts in a movie or 30-second news clip.  There is little, if any, time spent doing independent research.  If a website posts absurd article about Obama taking away our guns half a dozen of my friends share it on their Facebook feed without checking into it at all.  Our ignorance is a cancer and it is spreading.

CYBER: Anonymous Caucasus, Electronic Army of the Caucasus Emirate

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4th Media: Latin America and the US: The Apotheosis of Distrust

Corruption, Government, Military, Peace Intelligence

4th media croppedLatin America and the US: The Apotheosis of Distrust

The year 2013 was shockingly damaging to relations between the U.S. and the countries of Latin America. Edward Snowden’s revelations showed that in the Western Hemisphere, Washington is trying to play only by the rules it itself has written.

Using such spying programs as Prism, Boundless Informant and others, U.S. intelligence was collecting strategically useful information throughout the South American continent and using it to ensure the effectiveness of its policy in the region…

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