Actions

  Print Article
  BookMark Article

Categories    Category List

Advertising
Arts
Autos
Business
Careers
Computers
Current Affairs
Education And Reference
Entertainment
Finances
Food
Gaming
Gardening
Health
Holidays
Home And Family
Insurance
Internet
Investing
Legal
Medical
Men Only
Motorcyles
Outdoors
Pets And Animals
Relationships
Religion
Self Improvement
Shopping
Society
Software
Sports
Staying Fit
Technology
Travel
Weddings
Women Only
Writing And Speaking

Online Now    Online Now

Guests Online (5)

Bing (2)

Googlebot/2.1 (1)

Baiduspider (1)

Author Login    Author Login

Welcome Guest! Please login or create an account.

Username:

Password:



If you do not have an account yet, you can register ( Here ), or you may retrieve a lost user/pass ( Here ).

Sponsors    Our Sponsors

Navigation    Navigation

   10 newest articles RSS

Author Highlights    Featured Author

Station Master
London

View My Bio & Articles


Impact Of Social Media On Intelligence Analysis And Intelligence Training

Author : Stewart Wrighter   Top Author

Submitted : 2012-02-20    Word Count : 7    Popularity:   Not Rated

Tags:   intelligence analysis, intelligence training

Author RSS Feed   Author RSS Feed

The proliferation of social media technology over the past few years coupled with the recent leak of 250,000 classified documents by Wikileaks suggests that traditional means of intelligence analysis and intelligence gathering must continue to evolve and adapt. Intelligence training in the future must take into consideration the rise of social media and the role it will play in intelligence analysis from both the way in which an analyst gathers and uses information as well as how governments prevent classified information from being leaked. Future training will also have to train analysts in new methods of intelligence gathering that can take advantage of social media technology. Below I seek to describe traditional intelligence analysis and intelligence training and how that training must evolve.

Traditional intelligence analysis consisted of gathering information from sources on the ground, through various traditional media outlets such as newspapers, radio, and television, government informants, and relationship building. Intelligence analysis involves analysts at the national level including technical experts, country specialists, and subject matter experts across intelligence disciplines like human intelligence (HUMINT), signals intelligence (SIGINT), and imagery intelligence (IMINIT). Intelligence analysis is focused on analysts making sense of large volumes of information collected against national security requirements through the employment of analytic tradecraft. According to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, analysts absorb incoming information, evaluate it, produce an assessment of the current state of affairs within an assigned field or substantive area, and then forecast future trends or outcomes. More specifically, intelligence training teaches analysts to:

Carefully examine all available information and then s ort and identify relevant information
Establish the validity of the information
Establish the credibility and reliability of the information
Analyze the most valuable and impacting information
Provide the consumer with the most valuable and impactful information

While traditional intelligence analysis tools are still used effectively, analysts today must also adapt to the new environment created by the web of social media platforms such as blogs, YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook, location- based social networks, live casting, and even virtual worlds. This new social environment enables the breakdown of geographic boundaries and provides otherwise indistinctive groups a way in which to disseminate information and connect with similar individuals. Information (both valid and invalid) is easily available at the click of a few links to individuals across the globe. This expansion of information boundaries via social media affects intelligence analysis in two specific ways. First, it enables other governments or extremist groups to easily get their message out by creating a sense of social authority. These tools also assist groups in gathering information about individuals and other governments, and sifting though classified documents made available through leaks. For example, Hizb ut-Tahrir, Hezbollah, and numerous other extremist organizations have created social media campaigns to spread their message, garner new supporters, and solicit funds. Second, this new environment provides intelligence analysts with additional ways in which to track threats and extremist groups. Therefore, while this environment makes collecting information easier, new technology also provides extremist groups with an easier way in which to collect information against governments and/or leak important information.

Due to these new technological advances in information sharing, intelligence training today must teach analysts how to manage social networks in order to gather accurate information while preventing the spread of classified information on these very networks. Whether through sentiment analysis of tweets or sifting through lengthy diatribes on extremist blogs and chat rooms, intelligence analysts must learn to utilize social media while governments must protect themselves from individuals that use these social networks in an attempt to destroy the very society that created such technology.

Author's Resource Box

Dan Sommer works for Henley-Putnam University, a leading educational institution in the field of Strategic Security. For more info on Henley-Putnam University, intelligence analysis, intelligence training, call 888-852-8746 or visit us online at http://www.Henley-Putnam.edu

Article Source:
Intra Realm! Build Your Own Zone!

 

  Report Article
Badly Written Offensive Content Spam
Bad Author Links Mis-spellings Bad Formatting
Bad Author Photo Good Article!