Anonymous ID: b3c4a1 In- Q- tel Feb. 23, 2018, 12:28 p.m. No.474508   🗄️.is 🔗kun

sorry this post is so long, but lots of relevant data.

Did Some searching Into McLean VA to try to see what was there, Besides Gannett, the company behind USA Today which is based in McLean, I found that the CIA's In -Q -tel (formerly known as peleus and In-Q- it) venture capital branch recently made an investment into“ZoomData”, a visual Analytics Specialist company. Not sure but I think its tied into Visual Sciences also out of McLean Va. Zoomdata uses “Apache” Spark software, and is part of the Amazon Web Services which is host to 17 US intelligence agencies. Also I found that Zoomdata was related to another CIA purchase called Databricks – so In checking them out I came across this article from the intercept which was full of info and connects all the software that the CIA is purchasing to datamine Twitter and other social media so that they can track any social unrest or disturbances and predict and control public outbreaks. (too much there for me to wrap my mind around) https:// theintercept.com/2016/04/14/in-undisclosed-cia-investments-social-media-mining-looms-large/

the article has some great graphics of how these systems interconnect and how far reaching their uses can be. I found the following paragraphs of the article to be very informative as well -since we are using github …

The recent wave of investments in social media-related companies suggests the CIA has accelerated the drive to make collection of user-generated online data a priority. Alongside its investments in start-ups, In-Q-Tel has also developed a special technology laboratory in Silicon Valley, called Lab41, to provide tools for the intelligence community to connect the dots in large sets of data.

In February, Lab41 published an article exploring the ways in which a Twitter user’s location could be predicted with a degree of certainty through the location of the user’s friends. On Github, an open source website for developers, Lab41 currently has a project to ascertain the “feasibility of using architectures such as Convolutional and Recurrent Neural Networks to classify the positive, negative, or neutral sentiment of Twitter messages towards a specific topic.”

Collecting intelligence on foreign adversaries has potential benefits for counterterrorism, but such CIA-supported surveillance technology is also used for domestic law enforcement and by the private sector to spy on activist groups.

Palantir, one of In-Q-Tel’s earliest investments in the social media analytics realm, was exposed in 2011 by the hacker group LulzSec to be in negotiation for a proposal to track labor union activists and other critics of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest business lobbying group in Washington. The company, now celebrated as a “tech unicorn” — a term for start-ups that reach over $1 billion in valuation — distanced itself from the plan after it was exposed in a cache of leaked emails from the now-defunct firm HBGary Federal..Yet other In-Q-Tel-backed companies are now openly embracing the practice. Geofeedia, for instance, promotes its research into Greenpeace activists, student demonstrations, minimum wage advocates, and other political movements. Police departments in Oakland, Chicago, Detroit, and other major municipalities have contracted with Geofeedia, as well as private firms such as the Mall of America and McDonald’s.

Lee Guthman, an executive at Geofeedia, told reporter John Knefel that his company could predict the potential for violence at Black Lives Matter protests just by using the location and sentiment of tweets. Guthman said the technology could gauge sentiment by attaching “positive and negative points” to certain phrases, while measuring “proximity of words to certain words.” Privacy advocates, however, have expressed concern about these sorts of automated judgments.

 

“When you have private companies deciding which algorithms get you a so-called threat score, or make you a person of interest, there’s obviously room for targeting people based on viewpoints or even unlawfully targeting people based on race or religion,” said Lee Rowland, a senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union.

She added that there is a dangerous trend toward government relying on tech companies to “build massive dossiers on people” using “nothing but constitutionally protected speech.”