Welcome to the Memory Hole – Don’t Kill the Leaker, Just Make Their Leaked Information “Invisible”

07 Other Atrocities, Commerce, Corruption, Government, IO Deeds of War
Who?  Who?
Who? Who?

Don't kill the Leaker, Kill the Leaker's Information

The particularly nasty end of the spear of IC clandestine services, the part that kills people, may be out of a big part of their job thanks to technology, in the light of the terrifying but deeply interesting article by Peter Van Buren. They don't don't have to kill Snowden or any other whistle blower who leaks information critical for the public to know. They just have to get Google and others to automate the deletion and deep-sixing of any new or old leaked information: don't kill the leaker, kill the leaker's information.

“What if Edward Snowden was made to disappear? No, I’m not suggesting some future CIA rendition effort or a who-killed-Snowden conspiracy theory of a disappearance, but a more ominous kind.What if everything a whistleblower had ever exposed could simply be made to go away? What if every National Security Agency (NSA) document Snowden released, every interview he gave, every documented trace of a national security state careening out of control could be made to disappear in real-time? What if the very posting of such revelations could be turned into a fruitless, record-less endeavor?”

SmartPlanet: Google Planning to Dominate Ubiquitous Sensor Processing

Advanced Cyber/IO

smartplanet logoWhy Google bought robot-maker Boston Dynamics

Google has bought Boston Dynamics, the maker of futuristic military-grade robots including the galloping “WildCat” and the Sandflea, which can jump more than nine metres into the air.

Boston Dynamics is the eighth robotics company Google has purchased in the past six months.

CBC business commentator Kevin O'Leary, chair of O'Leary Funds, said Monday that the strategy makes sense, given the majority of “smart and new money going to startups today” is targeting sensor technology.

“These robots are basically a bundle of sensors,” he added. “What Google is doing here is simply buying a company that's extremely advanced at writing software to interface with sensors.”

Google confirmed the purchase to the New York Times late last week.

Click for video and links.

Eagle: Charles Hugh Smith on What’s Real? What’s Fake?

Commerce, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government, Idiocy, Ineptitude, IO Impotency
300 Million Talons...
300 Million Talons…

What's Real? What's Fake?

Is the unemployment rate real or fake? It is obviously fake, but we want to believe the fake is real for a variety of reasons.

We like to think we know the difference between what's real and what's fake. When we're fooled by a fake Rolex watch purchased for $20 on some humid Asian street corner, we shrug it off: it's no big deal because the fake isn't harming anyone.

And when it's difficult to discern the fake from the legitimate, as in fine art paintings and financial policy, we rely on experts to differentiate between the two.

But what if the “experts” are as clueless as the rest of us? What if they've been corrupted by easy money to authenticate the fake as legitimate? Consider ObamaCare, an extraordinarily complex policy that “experts” assure us is a phenomenal advancement that is “working well.”

But what if ObamaCare is a fake? What if it is really not insurance at all, but a giant skimming machine designed to enrich and solidify the power of the state-cartel that operates the sickcare system?

Continue reading “Eagle: Charles Hugh Smith on What's Real? What's Fake?”

Stephen E. Arnold: Goldman Sachs Web Conference Leaves Out Search Vendors

Advanced Cyber/IO, IO Sense-Making, IO Technologies
Stephen E. Arnold
Stephen E. Arnold

Goldman Sachs Web Conference Leaves Out Search Vendors

What tech companies does the financial sector think are on top right now? TechCrunch discussed invitees ahead of the recent Goldman Sachs Private Internet Company Conference in Las Vegas in, “Here Are the Hottest Companies in Tech Right Now, According to Goldman Sachs.” Reporter Colleen Taylor reproduces for us the conference schedule, which apparently should have been kept on the down-low, but TechCrunch got a hold of somehow. She writes:

“The Goldman Sachs conference for private web firms is one of the most high-end and hush-hush events in the tech world. It’s essentially like the Hackers Conference or dinners at Sheryl Sandberg’s house or Fight Club, except for tech executives who are likely to soon go through an IPO or big M&A deal. If you’re on the invite list, you’re in pretty good company — and the first rule is that you don’t talk about it to others.

“[…] It bears mention that companies attending this conference have not necessarily engaged in an exclusive relationship with Goldman to manage their potential upcoming IPOs or M&A deals. In fact, most of them are free agents, fielding offers from any number of firms.”

Taylor points out a few notable absences, like Square, Dropbox, and Box. We, however, noticed something different: not a single search company is represented. Well, humph.

Cynthia Murrell, December 16, 2013

Sponsored by ArnoldIT.com, developer of Augmentext

Continue reading “Stephen E. Arnold: Goldman Sachs Web Conference Leaves Out Search Vendors”

Mini-Me: All-Source Fusion “State of …”

Advanced Cyber/IO, IO Impotency, IO Sense-Making, IO Technologies
Who?  Mini-Me?
Who? Mini-Me?

Huh?

2013 Majority Staff Report on the National Network of Fusion Centers (HCHS)

2012 Data Fusion: Uncovering Data Patterns and Leveraging Multiple Data Sources (Tuttle & Rose, PPC)

2012 Sensor and Data Fusion: A Tool for Information Assessment and Decision-Making (SPIE, 2012)

Continue reading “Mini-Me: All-Source Fusion “State of …””

Mini-Me: Palantir’s OSINT Demo + Palantir & All-Source Workstation Round-Up

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

Huh?

OSINT Analysis of Sudan and South Sudan

In this session, we will demonstrate how Palantir can draw from a plethora of Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) data sources (including academic research, blogs, news media, NGO reports and United Nations studies) to rapidly construct an understanding of the conflict underlying this somewhat anomalous 21st Century event. Using a suite of Palantir Helpers developed for OSINT analysis, the video performs relational, temporal, statistical, geospatial, and social network analysis of over a dozen open sources of data.

Continue reading “Mini-Me: Palantir's OSINT Demo + Palantir & All-Source Workstation Round-Up”

noble gold