NSA Seeks Holy Grail of Spy Technology
I'd like to hear what people's opinions are regarding this particular issue.
Personally, I find it to be horrible that the government is developing A.I. for the purpose of gathering information on basically anything and everything in order to compile a list on a person, their personality, the causes they believe in, and even guesstimates on what they are thinking. And they're doing it with our taxpayer dollars! Essentially we're all paying money in order to fund a program that will eventually be used to spy on us all.
Yes, I know saying this will get me put on "The List"
CuttingEdge100 aka Helen
The National Security Agency (NSA) is developing a tool that George Orwell’s Thought Police might have found useful: an artificial intelligence system designed*to gain insight into what people are thinking.
With the entire Internet and thousands of databases for a brain, the device will be able to respond almost instantaneously to complex questions posed by intelligence analysts. As more and more data is collected — through*phone calls, credit card receipts, social networks like Facebook and MySpace, GPS tracks, cell phone geolocation, Internet searches, Amazon book purchases, even E-Z Pass toll records — it may one day be possible to know*not just where people are and what they are doing, but what and how they*think.
The system is so potentially intrusive that at least one researcher has quit, citing concerns over the dangers in* placing such a powerful weapon in the hands of a top-secret agency with little accountability.
Getting Acquaint
Known as Aquaint, which stands for “Advanced QUestion Answering for INTelligence,” the project was run for*many years by John Prange, an NSA scientist at the Advanced Research and Development Activity. Headquartered in Room 12A69 in the NSA’s Research and Engineer ing Building at 1 National Business Park, ARDA was*set up by the agency to serve as a sort of intelligence community DARPA, the place where former Reagan*national security advisor John Poindexter’s infamous Total Information Awareness project was born. [Editor’s note:*TIA was a short-lived project founded in 2002 to apply information technology to counter terrorist and other threats*to national security.] Later named the Disruptive Technology Office, ARDA has now morphed into the Intelligence*Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA).
A sort of national laboratory for eavesdropping and other spycraft, IARPA will move into its new 120,000-square-foot home in 2009. The building will be part of the new M Square Research Park in College Park, Maryland. A mammoth two million-square-foot, 128-acre complex, it is operated in collaboration with the University of Maryland. “Their budget is classified, but I understand it’s very well funded,” said Brian Darmody, the*University of Maryland’s assistant vice president of research and economic development, referring to IARPA. “They’ll be in their own building here, and they’re*going to grow. Their mission is expanding.”
If IARPA is the spy world’s DARPA, Aquaint may be the reincarnation of Poindexter’s TIA. After a briefing by NSA Director Michael Hayden, Vice President Dick*Cheney, and CIA Director George Tenet of some of the NSA’s datamining programs in July 2003, Senator Jay Rockefeller IV, the vice chairman of the Senate*Intelligence Committee, wrote a concerned letter to Cheney. “As I reflected on the meeting today,” he said, “John Poindexter’s TIA project sprung to mind, exacerbating my concern regard ing the direction the administration is moving with regard to security, technology, and surveillance.”
Thought policeman
A supersmart search engine, capable of answering complex questions such as “What were the major issues in the last 10 presidential elections?” would be very*useful for the public. But that same capability in the hands of an agency like the NSA — absolutely secret, often above the law, resistant to oversight, and with*access to petabytes of private information about Americans — could be a privacy and civil liberties nightmare. “We must not forget that the ultimate goal is to* transfer research results into operational use,” said Aquaint project leader John Prange, in charge of information exploitation for*IARPA.
Once up and running, the database of old newspapers could quickly be expanded to include an inland sea of personal information scooped up by the agency’s*warrantless data suction hoses. Unregulated, they could ask it to determine which Americans might likely pose a security risk — or have sympathies toward a*particular cause, such as the antiwar movement, as was done during the 1960s and 1970s. The Aquaint robospy might then base its decision on the type of* books a person purchased online, or chat room talk, or websites visited — or a similar combination of data. Such a system would have an enormous chilling*effect on everyone’s everyday activities — what will the Aquaint computer think if I buy this book, or go to that website, or make this comment? Will I be suspected*of being a terrorist or a spy or a subversive?
I'd like to hear what people's opinions are regarding this particular issue.
Personally, I find it to be horrible that the government is developing A.I. for the purpose of gathering information on basically anything and everything in order to compile a list on a person, their personality, the causes they believe in, and even guesstimates on what they are thinking. And they're doing it with our taxpayer dollars! Essentially we're all paying money in order to fund a program that will eventually be used to spy on us all.
Yes, I know saying this will get me put on "The List"

CuttingEdge100 aka Helen