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ID130227
Title ProperParadox of open source
Other Title Informationan interview with Douglas J. Naquin
LanguageENG
AuthorBean, Hamilton
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Associated Press (AP) reported on 8 November 2005 that, as part of post-11 September 2001 (9/11) United States intelligence reform efforts, the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) had established the Open Source Center (OSC). 1 Then-Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), former Florida congressman Porter Goss, described the OSC as a "major strategic initiative and commitment to the value we place on openly available information." 2 Challenging Goss's statement of commitment, the AP asserted that the OSC had actually been created, in part, in order to "elevate a brand of information [open source] that's long been a stepchild in the U.S. spy community." 3 Directed to "collect and study information that's publicly available around the world, including media reports, Internet postings and even T-shirts in Southeast Asia," 4 the OSC described itself as "the US Government's premier provider of foreign open source intelligence." 5 Visitors to the OpenSource.gov Website were told that the OSC offered authorized government employees and contractors "information on foreign political, military, economic, and technical issues beyond the usual media from an ever expanding universe of open sources
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence Vol.27, No.1, Spring 2014: p.42-57
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence Vol.27, No.1, Spring 2014: p.42-57
Key WordsOpen Source Center - OSC ;  United States - US ;  US Intelligence Reforms ;  Central Intelligence Agency - CIA ;  National Intelligence ;  Military Economic ;  Political Agenda ;  Political Issues ;  Economic Issues ;  Military Issue ;  Foreign Policy ;  Tactical Issues ;  Strategic Issues


 
 
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