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The grassroots community rebels against the ugov.gov shutdown - Is Intellipedia next?
Ugov and BRIDGE, two tools that were allowing greater collaboration in the intelligence community, have been shut down because of security concerns. This post contains links to several articles related to the story.
Hotgrinds Presentation
A presentation on SlideShare about the functions and features of an online, collaborative debating platform, a version of which is being used by the intelligence community as part of the BRIDGE program.
Who's using wikis
Federal Computer Week provides a quick list of government agencies using wikis and what they are using them for.
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The list of government wikis and the variety of purposes for which they are used continues to expand. The versatility of wikis’ freely editable Web pages makes them a great tool for the types of knowledge sharing and collaborative projects that government employees work on every day.
Here is a sampling of government wikis that illustrate that wide range of uses.
Critical systems thinking
I recently came across a reference to "Critical Systems Thinking" in a blog comment by a professor at the Army's Command and General Staff College. Having not heard the term before, I looked it up. Here's a link to the Wikipedia entry about CST. Definitely interesting and worth some more reading.
Data Catalog - District of Columbia
The District of Columbia is providing RSS feeds as well as mashups of "city operational data," such as crime reports, building permits, purchase orders, and much more. This seems like a great example of using new media/web 2.0 technologies to increase government transparency.
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For years the District of Columbia has provided public access to city operational data through the Internet. Now the District provides real-time data from multiple agencies to citizens, a catalyst ensuring agencies operate as more responsive, better performing organizations. Use the data catalog below to subscribe to a live data feed in Atom format and access data in XML, Text/CSV, KML or ESRI Shapefile formats.
Microsoft FusionX solution for government
Looks like Microsoft is getting into the intelligence software business. Let's hope FusionX works better than Vista!
The Evolution of Preparing the NIC’s Global Trends 2025 Report
An intersting and informative bit of quick, qualitative, longitudinal analysis here that gives good insight into the changes beginning to take place in the U.S. intelligence community. Ironically, enough, the emerging impacts of new media, information, and communication technologies for intelligence was the topic of the week in the "IT and Global Conflict" course I am teaching at U of U. As such, I forwarded this post to my students.
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insular, stove-piped work is being replaced with barrier-busting exchanges of informed viewpoints across the globe. Here’s how the NIC authors break it down:
Global Trends 2010: “… relied exclusively on expertise within the U.S. Intelligence Community.”
Global Trends 2015: “…engaged more numerous and more varied groups of non-US Government experts, most of whom were American citizens.”
Global Trends 2020: “…we greatly expanded the participation of non-American specialists by convening six seminars on five continents.”
Global Trends 2025: “In addition to increasing still more the participation of non-USG experts from the United States and abroad to develop the framework for the current study, we shared several drafts with participants via the Internet and a series of discussion sessions across the US and in several other countries.”
A tale of four IT programs
An article in November's Armed Forces Journal about how IT programs are being used in the conduct of counterinsurgency. Web-based/web-inspired systems making use of blogs, wikis, and forums have been most successful thus far, as have those using what could be called a user-centered design approach.
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In the spring of 2005, a tactical problem met a technical solution. While working as a program manager in the Information Processing Technology Office of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Mari Maeda began speaking with soldiers returning from Iraq and discovered an operational need: Soldiers at the battalion level and below needed additional information technology to better conduct counterinsurgency operations.
Every day, soldiers were learning about their operating environment and their enemy. The knowledge they gained while on patrol or conducting a mission could mean the difference between life and death, mission success or failure. However, they had only limited information technology assets available and none properly suited to the challenges of counterinsurgency, where information must not only be passed between echelons, it must be shared laterally between small units and stored for replacement units.
Troops in theater had been creative in their approaches to the challenge. Some units developed databases employing Microsoft Access, some used massive spreadsheets linked to relevant files, others simply did things the old fashioned way — with filing cabinets full of paper reports. One of the more creative and well-resourced approaches was the development of CavNet by the 1st Cavalry Division. Developed entirely in house by 1st Cavalry, CavNet was essentially a collection of blogs and forums that allowed junior leaders down to the squad level to share information with one another across the entire division. It was so successful that various forms are still in use.
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Seeing gaps in capability and a clear operational need, soldiers from the 1st Cavalry Division teamed with Maeda to work on what would be called the Tactical Ground Reporting system, or TIGR (pronounced “tiger”).
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DOD jumps on wiki bandwagon
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Defense Department officials have launched a wiki as a way to improve collaboration among agency scientists, engineers, acquisition workers and military service members.
DOD Techipedia is similar to online encyclopedia Wikipedia and the intelligence community’s Intellipedia, said John Young, undersecretary of Defense for acquisition, technology and logistics.
FBI creates knowledge wiki
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The FBI is testing a new collaborative internal Web site, or wiki, called Bureaupedia that officials say will enable users to create an encyclopedia of lessons learned, best practices and subject-matter expertise.
Officials see Bureaupedia as a knowledge management tool that will let agents and analysts share their experiences to ensure that their accumulated insight remains after they retire.
Blogging Dream Team Joins Forces to Challenge Engadget, TreeHugger and More - ReadWriteWeb
The blogging platform behind the new "Crowd Fusion" project is the kind of thing I have been thinking about for a while. While there are good tools for collaboratively creating and sharing content (e.g. wikis, Google Docs, etc.), currently there is no good way for a project team to collaboratively collect and process information. Each individual will have his/her own information stream and processing workflow. Each individual works individually up to the point at which something is shared with the group on a wiki, etc. The system behind Crowd Fusion, however, turns collection and processing of online information into a collaborative process as well. Sounds like this could work well as an online, distributed, OSINT platform.
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What's so special about it? The system has a built-in RSS reader that team leaders seed with subscriptions (writers can add more at will), it's easy to push related links from other blogs out onto the published site and the system allows for the management of multiple responsibilities for posts like finding and sizing images, copy editing and more. Obsessable says it is aggregating about 1,000 topical links each day from around the web. It's all pretty involved but we couldn't help but be jealous of the publishing interface.
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