Archive for the 'Military' Category

9/11 10 Years Later

A day that began as any normal day before it.  People going about their business living their day-to-day lives.  That sense of normalcy disappeared in an instant.  Lacking that “old normal” from September 10, 2001 represents the biggest change in the last decade.

The events that occurred on September 11 are the primary reason so many of us – the law enforcement and intelligence communities in particular – work so hard to enhance our security capabilities in preventing another attack.

As CEO of i2, I am always humbled by the commitment and dedication of our police officers, intelligence analysts and the men and women serving in uniform around the world.  Their sacrifices to make the world more secure never go unnoticed. I’m often asked if we’re safer today than we were on September 11. As a nation, we have come a long way in fixing some of the problems the 9/11 Commission highlighted in its report. For example: READ MORE

Trends in Network Intelligence

This post was developed by i2 as an advertorial for the Spring 2011 edition of RUSI’s (The Royal United Services Institute) Defence Systems.

In 2003, Saddam Hussein was on the run. With his chain of command eliminated, traditional intelligence efforts to track him down were failing. Col. James Hickey, U.S. Army, heading the intelligence operation to find Saddam, determined that the reclusive Iraqi dictator only trusted and communicated with family members of his own tribal group. As Hickey said, “We built a fairly elaborate estimate of who Saddam’s supporters were in the area; though it did provide security, it also worked against them. Once we learnt who did what, it allowed us to work against them.”1

Hickey and his team were using a nascent form of Social Network Analysis (SNA). In its purest form, SNA relies on examining the linkages between people and places within a defined group or locality in order to deduce the key decision makers or vulnerable links and where they are located. In this case, it was the pinpointing of Saddam’s chauffeurs that led to his historic capture.

Figure 1

READ MORE

A Message From Bob Griffin, CEO, i2

There is not a single person on earth that wasn’t impacted in some way by the terrorist attacks that took place in the Eastern United States on the morning of September 11, 2001. The images were not only unbelievable, but as the details were released about the attacks and information began to be released about the number of people injured and killed, we knew that the world had changed in many ways that most of us on September 10th couldn’t have imagined. READ MORE

i2 and ESRI Collaborate to Provide Unparalleled Solution for Analytics and Geospatial Intelligence

ESRI Foundation Module for i2’s Analyst’s Notebook: an Important Tool for Defense/Intelligence Human Terrain Mapping, Law Enforcement and Others

A new solution announced today at the Department of Defense Intelligence Information Systems (DoDIIS) Worldwide Conference will give defense and intelligence personnel unprecedented analysis capabilities for human terrain mapping, better arming them for current and future counterinsurgency (COIN) and anti-terrorism operations.  Read the press release.

Cyber Security – Hackers are the new “good guys” as cyber war escalates

Computer hackers are no longer viewed as outsiders living in their parents’ basements — occasionally dangerous, but usually more of an annoyance to government cyber security professionals.  In fact, the governments of the U.S. and the United Kingdom are actively recruiting them as their newest weapon to answer their malicious counterparts who are members of organized crime rings and hostile nation-state cyber armies. The U.S announced this year its first-ever “Cyber Challenge,” a nationwide contest which mirrors a similar competition China has been running for five years. Organizers say the Cyber Challenge is designed to identify young people with exceptional computer skills and inspire them to join the shorthanded ranks of specialists needed to protect government, military and industrial cyber infrastructure. READ MORE