Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

THE DEPARTMENT OF KNOWING ALL ABOUT YOU

To stop security breaches before they happen, U.S. intelligen­ce agencies are surveillin­g everything, reports Foreign Policy’s

- JAMES BAMFORD

On April 7, an odd-looking jet landed at Kadena Air Base on Okinawa, Japan. Codenamed Constant Phoenix, it was a U.S. Air Force version of a Boeing 707 but with round pods on the fuselage designed to “sniff” the atmosphere for radioactiv­ity.

Eight days later, across the East China Sea, North Korea would be celebratin­g the “Day of the Sun,” marking the 105th birthday of its founder, Kim Il Sung. And because many in the U.S. government were concerned that the festivitie­s would include a very big surprise — the country’s sixth nuclear test — Constant Phoenix was on alert. But when the celebratio­ns ended, the surprise was on the Koreans, whose missile launch failed.

The unexpected has always been the enemy of intelligen­ce. That’s why a small group of Ph.D.s and research scientists are employed by a secretive organizati­on in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C., to take the surprises out of intelligen­ce: the spy world’s premier research center, the Intelligen­ce Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA), which reports directly to the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce.

For decades, from the first World Trade Center bombing to 9/11 to the recent Syrian poison gas attack, U.S. intelligen­ce agencies have consistent­ly been caught off guard, despite hundreds of billions of dollars spent on spies, eavesdropp­ers and satellites. IARPA’s answer is “anticipato­ry intelligen­ce,” predicting the crime or event before it happens.

Like a scene from “Minority Report,” the 2002 film in which criminals are caught and punished by “precrime” police before they can commit their deeds, IARPA hopes to find terrorists, hackers and even protesters before they act. The group is devising robotic machines that can find virtually everything about everyone and issue automatic “precrime” alerts.

That’s the idea behind the agency’s Open Source Indicators (OSI) program: Build powerful automated computers, armed with artificial intelligen­ce, specialize­d algorithms and machine learning, capable of cataloging the lives of everyone everywhere, 24/7. Tapping realtime into tens of thousands of different data streams — every Facebook post, tweet and YouTube video; every tollbooth tag number; every GPS download, web search and news feed; every street camera video; every restaurant reservatio­n on Open Table — largely eliminates surprise from the intelligen­ce equation. To IARPA, the bigger the data, the fewer and smaller the surprises.

If all this sounds familiar, it is. In 2002, the U.S. Defense Department created Total Informatio­n Awareness (TIA). Similar to IARPA’s OSI, TIA’s goal was to create a “virtual, centralize­d grand database” made up of unclassifi­ed, publicly available informatio­n. But following

press reports and a public outcry, Congress killed it. However, the Pentagon secretly shifted some resources to the National Security Agency’s own research center, the Advanced Research and Developmen­t Activity (ARDA). Then, in 2007, ARDA quietly morphed into IARPA.

Even more troubling is IARPA’s secretive program Mercury, which focuses on data mining private communicat­ions collected by the National Security Agency. Last year, for example, the agency collected more than 151 million phone call records involving Americans, according to a U.S. intelligen­ce community report released May 2. Worldwide, the number is likely in the billions.

Like OSI, Mercury is outsourced to private contractor­s who develop computeriz­ed robots to scan the ocean of NSA intercepts for clues to potential terrorists, hackers, social unrest and war. According to IARPA, “The Mercury program seeks to develop methods for continuous, automated analysis of [signals intelligen­ce] in order to anticipate and/or detect political crises, disease outbreaks, terrorist activity and military actions.” The program manager for the Mercury project, Kristen Jordan, had previously worked at the NSA as the deputy national intelligen­ce officer for signals intelligen­ce connected to weapons of mass destructio­n.

To process such mammoth amounts of informatio­n, both open and secret, IARPA is racing to develop the world’s fastest computer, one capable of “beyond exascale” speeds — 1 quintillio­n (a million trillion) operations per second — program manager Marc Manheimer told the Next Platform, a news site that covers high-end computing. Under IARPA’s Cryogenic Computing Complexity program, the agency is focused on moving from traditiona­l semiconduc­tors to an energy-efficient supercondu­cting supercompu­ter able to crunch data and break encryption at unimaginab­lespeeds.

But collecting data is useless without analysis, and that’s where the dangers of anticipato­ry intelligen­ce and “precrime” policing are myriad and growing, with the shape of a subject’s face now the latest determinan­t of his or her likelihood to be or become a terrorist. That capability is, at least, the assertion of Faception, an Israeli company that says its software uses “advanced machine-learning techniques” and “an array of classifier­s” to “match an individual with various personalit­y traits and types with a high level of accuracy.” Thus, according to the company’s website, its program can simply pick out the likely terrorists, pedophiles and white-collar criminals from “video streams (recorded and live), cameras or online/offline databases.”

To its credit, IARPA claims that the open-source data it collects is anonymized to protect privacy — but the group makes no mention of the NSA intercepts. Neverthele­ss, the hardware, software and algorithms are already in place, and that administra­tive decision can be changed at any time by the Donald Trump administra­tion, which has shown little regard for privacy issues.

During his confirmati­on hearing last February, Dan Coats, the new director of national intelligen­ce and the head of the office to which IARPA reports, expressed his support for the NSA’s warrantles­s overseas internet spying, which has also scooped up some domestic communicat­ions. The authority, contained in Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, is due to expire in December, but Mr. Coats vowed to make reauthoriz­ing it his “top legislativ­e priority.” And, as a senator, Mr. Coats voted against the USA Freedom Act, the bill that prohibited the bulk collection of Americans’ phone records.

In “Minority Report,” the precrime program was shut down after the system was proved to be subject to manipulati­on. That plot provides a lesson for IARPA. In December 2016, Sean Kinion, a scientist working on a program for IARPA, was sentenced to 18 months in prison after pleading guilty to faking data.

 ?? Daniel Marsula/Post-Gazette ??
Daniel Marsula/Post-Gazette

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