http://washingtontimes.com/national/20061025-102921-8851r.htm

 


The Washington Times

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 <http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20061025-102921-8851r.htm> U.S.
revives terror data mining


By Shaun Waterman
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Published October 26, 2006

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The U.S. intelligence czar is developing a computer system capable of mining
huge amounts of information about everyday events for patterns that look
like terrorist planning -- technology reminiscent of the discontinued Total
Information Awareness (TIA) program. 
    Civil liberties and privacy advocates have criticized the effort, called
Tangram, which is being developed by contractors working for the Office of
the Director of National Intelligence John D. Negroponte. 
    "They are misdirecting resources towards this kind of fanciful,
science-fiction project," said Tim Sparapani, legislative counsel with the
American Civil Liberties Union, "while neglecting the basics" of good
counterterrorism detective work. 
    Mr. Negroponte's office declined to comment on the program, but it is
described in some detail in a procurement document posted on the Web by the
U.S. Air Force, and officials have said it is being tested without using any
data about Americans. 
    The document says the system -- funded for $49 million in research over
the next four years -- will build on previous work by U.S. intelligence
agencies to develop "methods of ... efficiently searching large data stores
for evidence of known [terrorist] behaviors." 
    An intelligence official who asked for anonymity said the system was
being tested using two data sets -- one artificial and the other consisting
of intelligence information from the Department of Defense. 
    "There is nothing in there that does not comply with the regulations on
U.S. persons," said the official, referring to rules that govern what
information U.S. intelligence agencies can collect, analyze and store about
American citizens and legal residents. 
    Nonetheless, the new system is bound to attract criticism because of its
similarity to the TIA program, a project run by the Pentagon's Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency. TIA also aimed to detect patterns of
suspected terrorist behavior by data-mining huge stores of information about
everyday transactions such as credit-card purchases, telephone calls and
travel records. 
    In response to concerns about the program's privacy and civil liberties
implications, Congress in 2003 cut all funding for it, but research
continued in different agencies, funded by classified appropriations for
Pentagon intelligence agencies. 
    Most of that continuing research was conducted by the Advanced Research
and Development Activity, formerly based at the National Security Agency but
now part of Mr. Negroponte's office. The National Journal, which first
revealed the existence of Tangram last week, said ARDA would oversee the new
program, too. 
    "The administration has flat-out ignored Congress," Mr. Sparapani said.
"They renamed it, retied the bow around and off they went." 
    National Journal reported that the government last month awarded three
contracts for Tangram research and development at a cost of nearly $12
million. Two of the firms receiving awards -- Booz Allen Hamilton and 21st
Century Technologies Inc. -- worked on the TIA program. The third, SRI
International, worked on one of its predecessors, the so-called Genoa
project. 
    



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