Marcus Aurelius: How Snowden “Came Out” — Includes Tradecraft Insights

Advanced Cyber/IO, Civil Society, Government, Media, Military
Marcus Aurelius
Marcus Aurelius

How Laura Poitras Helped Snowden Spill His Secrets

This past January, Laura Poitras received a curious e-mail from an anonymous stranger requesting her public encryption key. For almost two years, Poitras had been working on a documentary about surveillance, and she occasionally received queries from strangers. She replied to this one and sent her public key — allowing him or her to send an encrypted e-mail that only Poitras could open, with her private key — but she didn’t think much would come of it.

The stranger responded with instructions for creating an even more secure system to protect their exchanges. Promising sensitive information, the stranger told Poitras to select long pass phrases that could withstand a brute-force attack by networked computers. “Assume that your adversary is capable of a trillion guesses per second,” the stranger wrote.

Click on Image to Enlarge
Click on Image to Enlarge

Before long, Poitras received an encrypted message that outlined a number of secret surveillance programs run by the government. She had heard of one of them but not the others. After describing each program, the stranger wrote some version of the phrase, “This I can prove.”

Seconds after she decrypted and read the e-mail, Poitras disconnected from the Internet and removed the message from her computer. “I thought, O.K., if this is true, my life just changed,” she told me last month. “It was staggering, what he claimed to know and be able to provide. I just knew that I had to change everything.”

Read full article, includes tradecraft details.

Mini-Me: Reliable Teleportation at Quantum Level

Advanced Cyber/IO
Who?  Mini-Me?
Who? Mini-Me?

Huh?

Teleportation: Behind the Science of Quantum Computing

Researchers were able to reliably teleport information between quantum bits.

Melody Kramer

National Geographic, August 14, 2013

It might seem like something straight from the Star Trek universe, but two new research experiments—one involving a photon and the other involving a super-conducting circuit—have successfully demonstrated the teleportation of quantum bits.

If that sounds like gobbledygook, don't worry. We got in touch with one of the researchers, physicist Andreas Wallraff, of the Quantum Device Lab at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, to explain how his team and a team based at the University of Tokyo were able to reliably teleport quantum states from one place to another.

People have done this before but it hasn't necessarily been reliable. The new complementary research, which comes out in Nature today, is reliable—and therefore may have widespread applications in computing and cryptography.

Read full article.

Stephen E. Arnold: Heat in Text Radar – See Semaphore Content Intelligence Solution by Smartlogic

Advanced Cyber/IO
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

The Heat in Text Radar: August 2 to August 8

Posted: 12 Aug 2013 01:42 PM PDT

The Text Radar content intelligence and big data blog covered a multitude of issues surrounding the impact that big data is having on the way that more and more industries process and gain insights from their data.

The article, “Big Data Aiding in Healthcare with Timelier Predictions and the Promise of Life Saving Treatments” explains how genetic data and non invasive testing can determine the physical ailments someone is likely to have in their lifetime and allows for pre-emptive treatment opportunities.

The article states:

Continue reading “Stephen E. Arnold: Heat in Text Radar – See Semaphore Content Intelligence Solution by Smartlogic”

Marcus Aurelius: Iranian Outreach to Latin American Youth

Advanced Cyber/IO
Marcus Aurelius
Marcus Aurelius

(1) Anybody else think this sounds like Sovs' Patrice Lumumba University of another decade?;

(2) totally unsurprising; to use WWII terminology, development of an Iranian “fifth column” in Latin America, an organization that has the capability to fulfill roles similar to the “underground” and “auxiliary” in a doctrinal US-sponsored insurgency;

(3) might also be unsurprising to find Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Lebanese Hezbollah (LH), effectively an Iranian surrogate, doing deals with the Mexican drug cartels for use of the cartel's smuggling routes so as to develop support mechanisms for Iranian operators in the United States;

(4) article appeared on front page of Sunday's WaPo under title, “Mexican depicts iran's wooing of Hispanic youths.”

With lure of religious classes, Iran seeks to recruit Latin Americans

By

Washington Post, 10 August 2013

The Mexican law student was surprised by how easy it was to get into Iran two years ago. By merely asking questions about Islam at a party, he managed to pique the interest of Iran’s top diplomat in Mexico. Months later, he had a plane ticket and a scholarship to a mysterious school in Iran as a guest of the Islamic Republic.

Next came the start of classes and a second surprise: There were dozens of others just like him.

“There were 25 or 30 of us in my class, all from Latin America,” recalled the student, who was just 19 when he arrived at the small institute that styled itself an Iranian madrassa for Hispanics. “I met Colombians, Venezuelans, multiple Argentines.” Many were new Muslim converts, he said, and all were subject to an immersion course, in perfect Spanish, in what he described as “anti-Americanism and Islam.”

Continue reading “Marcus Aurelius: Iranian Outreach to Latin American Youth”

Howard Rheingold: YouTube (7:31) Precision Information Awareness for Emergency Responders

Advanced Cyber/IO, YouTube
Howard Rheingold
Howard Rheingold

Infotention comes to a community for whom it is literally a life and death manner. This video introduces a dashboard for emergency response professionals.

“The Precision Information Environment (PIE) Activity Awareness Environment was designed to improve the information synthesis process by bringing in multiple, disparate data feeds and sources, extracting features of interest and visualizing the information to give emergency response professionals insight and situational understanding in a timely and intuitive manner. The system also applies a user recommendation system to help filter the data based on the needs and activities of the user thereby giving them the right information at the right time.

Berto Jongman: Computer Language Imitates Human Brain?

Advanced Cyber/IO
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

New Computer Programming Language Imitates The Human Brain

As we pointed out earlier this week, we’re still far from being able to replicate the awesome power of the human brain. So rather than use traditional models of computing, IBM has decided to design an entirely new computer architecture — one that’s taking inspiration from nature.

For nearly 70 years, computer scientists have depended upon the Von Neumann architecture. The computer that you’re working on right now still uses this paradigm — an electronic digital system driven by processors and consisting of various processing units, including an arithmetic logic unit, a control unit, memory, and input/output mechanisms. These separate units store and process information sequentially, and they use programming languages designed specifically for those architectures.

Continue reading “Berto Jongman: Computer Language Imitates Human Brain?”

Stephen E. Arnold: Google Glass: Are Weaponized Nanodevices and Ultra-Miniaturization Coming?

Advanced Cyber/IO
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

Google Glass: Are Weaponized Nanodevices and Ultra-Miniaturization Coming?

Google’s earnings for the April, May, June 2013 quarter reminded me that Google faces some challenges. Expenses moved up a couple of billion from the same quarter in 2012. (Source). More troubling, Business Insider said, “The total number of paid clicks that Google gets continues to go up, but Google gets paid less for each one. In other words, Google's rock is still rolling up the hill but it takes a lot more energy to maintain that momentum than it used to.” (Source)

Google may have to do some fast dancing both in its current pricing in the short term and with its innovations over a longer period of time. Google may be looking at the US Federal government as a customer for some of the firm’s technology to bolster its revenues. Google and the military? Google and DARPA? Maps, yes, but a computer in your eyeball or smart nanodevices which are undetectable? It might be a trajectory worth considering. Apparently Microsoft is working on a wristwatch smartphone described in “Microsoft Testing Surface Watch”?  But devices are bulky, so very small devices make a great deal of sense to the forward-thinking.

Perhaps the urgency in innovation is the reason Google has been pushing forward with Glass’s next version? On the recent quarter’s earnings call, Larry Page, Google’s senior manager, said: “I love using Glass because I feel like every time I'm using Glass I'm living that future, that's really, really exciting to me.

Have I inadvertently glimpsed one possible trajectory for Google Glass? Is Google leapfrogging smartphones as wristwatches and moving beyond contact lenses and belt packs? Is Google looking to make revenue waves in medical diagnostics, nanomachines, and possibly DNA-scale communication devices? Science fiction or the path that Google Glass is now following? Is that $2 billion jump in R&D an indication that clean rooms, new research facilities, and world-class nanotechnology experts are signaling a new direction for Google—nano-bioengineering and synthetic biology? Could Google become a nanotechnology giant? I found some interesting open source intelligence which may help frame this question, but I only know one thing for certain. Google is not doing much talking in public about self-assembly, bioengineering, and nanotechnology.

Continue reading “Stephen E. Arnold: Google Glass: Are Weaponized Nanodevices and Ultra-Miniaturization Coming?”

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