Drones, IBM and the Big Data of Death
(
The Intercept) Oct. 23 2015, 8:47 a.m. LAST WEEK
The Intercept published a package of stories on the U.S. drone program, drawing on a cache of secret government documents leaked by an intelligence community whistleblower. The available evidence suggests that one of the documents, a study titled ISR Support to Small Footprint CT Operations Somalia/Yemen, was produced for the Defense Department in 2013 by consultants from IBM. If you look at just one classified PowerPoint presentation this year, I recommend you make it this one.
Like a good poem, the ISR study has multiple meanings, and rewards careful attention and repeated reading. On its surface, its simply an analysis by the Defense Departments Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) Task Force of the performance and requirements of the U.S. militarys counterterrorism kill/capture operations, including drone strikes, in Somalia and Yemen. However, its also what a former senior special operations officer characterized as a bitch brief that is, a study designed to be a weapon in a bureaucratic turf war with the CIA to win the Pentagon more money and a bigger mandate. The study was also presumably an opportunity for IBM to demonstrate that it can produce snappy analysis tailored to the desires of its Defense Department clients, as well as for current Defense employees to network with a potential future employer.
But the presentations most compelling meaning is much deeper: Its a rare, peculiar cultural artifact that opens a window into the deep guts of the military-industrial complex, where the technologies of assassination and corporate sales converge, all described in language as dead as the target of an ISR platform kinetic engagement.
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Edge Methods[/font]
In 2010, IBM employees delivered a talk at IBMs Analytics Solution Center in Washington, D.C., titled An Introduction to Edge Methods: Business Analytics and Optimization for Intelligence. The audience was the Defense and Intelligence communities, and IBMs goal was to explain to them how the company could help them with managing large volumes of data to derive invaluable insights. Among its already-existing governmental customers, IBM explained, was the ISR Task Force. .................(more)
https://theintercept.com/2015/10/23/drones-ibm-and-the-big-data-of-death/