CRIME [Fwd: [Homeland_security] Daily News 11/06/02]

From: Lyle Leavitt (lylel@private)
Date: Thu Nov 07 2002 - 08:56:08 PST

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    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: [Homeland_security] Daily News 11/06/02
    Date: Wed, 6 Nov 2002 08:43:05 -0600
    From: "NIPC Watch" <nipcwatch@private>
    To: "Homeland Security" <homeland_security@private>
    
    Homeland Security Staff Studies Data Analysis Tools
    
    Government Computer News 11/05/02
    http://www.gcn.com/vol1_no1/daily-updates/20428-1.html
    
    HERSHEY, Pa.-The Homeland Security Office is evaluating applications to let
    agencies analyze links and relationships among information sets without
    breaching privacy laws or sparking interagency turf battles.
    
    Steve Cooper, the office's CIO, said yesterday the goal of the current tests
    is to validate a data-sharing concept. The premise is that to better track
    information on possible security threats, agencies must at minimum share
    information about their data, he said at the Industry Advisory Council's
    Executive Leadership Conference.
    
    But fear of breaking privacy laws and the sense of ownership many agencies
    exhibit toward their data often keep the government from consolidating or
    even tracking information in useful ways, Cooper said.
    
    The actual pooling of data might not be necessary because simply knowing
    what types of data agencies are gathering ought to help intelligence
    analysts identify information sources related to possible threats, Cooper
    said. Then, as the need arises, officials could obtain court orders or
    agencies could negotiate with one another to obtain the data, he said.
    
    "We can create a map of what exists and where it exists using this
    technology," Cooper said. "The data might represent locations or people or
    facilities. We don't need to know what the content of the data is, but by
    analyzing what is interrelated to what, we can see patterns and see if it
    needs an additional look by intelligence analysts."
    
    He added that the type of software his staff is reviewing could help make
    associations between information that might have been overlooked.
    
    Cooper also emphasized that the term data goes beyond electronically stored
    information and that Homeland Security officials also want to use software
    tools to track paper files, intelligence tips and other information sources.
    
    The office is looking at an assortment of government
    research-and-development efforts as well as industry products that could be
    adapted for use by homeland security workers, Cooper said. Some packages
    that vendors tout as data-sharing solutions at best would fulfill only part
    of the information tracking function envisioned by the Homeland Security
    Office, he said.
    
    Cooper said he expects that the planned Homeland Security Department will
    earmark $1 million to launch a three- to six-month pilot to study such
    efforts.
    
    "We are working with the intelligence community to start this project in a
    classified environment," Cooper said.
    
    
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