[Oracle Corp Chairman and CEO] Larry Ellison wants to sell databases,
correct? So maybe now we can have everybody's fingerprints and retinal
scans put into computers. And Big Brother can be efficient with Oracle
software. Siebel [Systems] has purchased the world's largest American
flag and attached it to the side of their building, supposedly to
symbolize growth. Of course, that might imply their company's growth.
That is, if you want to invest now, it's a good chance to get in at a low
price.
On the political side, you see Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell and
talking about God punishing us. The cretins are coming out of the
woodwork,
The "Office of Homeland Security" does sound a little
over the top
It sounds like a phrase out of Orwell's 1984. It's scary as hell.
One of the things I don't think Bush gets is that the terrorists win if
they take away our freedoms, directly or indirectly.
“Yesterday’s Technology Tomorrow”—the phrase has been thrown around the
FBI for decades. It might be funny if it weren’t so true. “The agents
have encrypted radio; they’ve got night vision; they’ve got the
surveillance stuff,” says a former agent, one of several interviewed for
this piece. “They have top of the line everything—everything except
information technology.”
Not to dwell too much on Sun’s Scott McNealy, but he did popularize the
phrase “The network is the computer.” This idea, which the Fortune 500
started grasping five years ago, is as anti-stovepipe as you can get. It
sees individual computers as communication devices, whose ability to link
up with the rest of the world’s computers is more important than the
processing power they possess on their own. It sees the network as a
platform on which knowledge can be shared, amplified and re-created in
new innovative forms, the networked pieces adding up to far more than the
sum of their parts.
Victory in the information war depends on the ability to use that
information—to understand it, to react to it quickly. “September 11 was
all based on controlling information,” says Carver Mead, the CalTech
physicist, one of the fathers of the microprocessor and a pioneer in
neural networking, an approach to artificial intelligence based on
replicating the connective miracles of the human brain. “The fact is the
hijackers controlled all the information. They had all the information on
the first three planes—they were the only ones who knew what was going to
happen. On the fourth plane, there was a tiny amount of information
available to the passengers; they were able to use it to thwart the
plan.
“We actually knew a lot about some of these people,” says Mead. “We
actually did know a lot, but we didn’t put it together.”
Putting it together requires acceptance of the idea that the network is
the computer–and that the bigger and broader it is, the better.
a fit-for-the-1990s computer system will be in place at the agency by the
end of 2003 I PROMIS you.The FBI’s controversial Carnivore system, which
can read e-mail and track suspects’ Web activity, reportedly has a data
mining component called Coolmine to help it analyze the information. But
for most of Uncle Sam’s security-related data, mining is something done
by keyboard- and hunch-wielding humans, by hand.