28 September 2011
Costly Database of Terrorism Racket Porn Video
A sends:
-----Original Message-----
From: BenV <benv[at]intelcenter.com>
Date: Wed, 28 Sep 2011 18:57:27
To: <DailyBrief[at]yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [DailyBrief] IntelCenter Dubbed Netflix of Terrorism - Feedback
on Searching Terrorist Video
We just rolled out a new terrorist/rebel online database that allows full
searching and streaming of up to HD quality video and full screen viewing.
It's part of our existing IntelCenter Database (ICD) and is called the Video
Component. The database is accessible from anywhere with a Net connection
and will support optimized versions for phone and tablet devices. The library
goes back 20 years and once fully migrated will be in excess of 15,000 videos.
You can see more details at
http://www.intelcenter.com/icd/
Fast Company just released an article on the database dubbing us the NetFlix
of terrorism. You can see the piece here:
http://www.fastcompany.com/1783435/netflix-for-terrorists and I put the full
text below.
Here's my question. How would you like to search for terrorist/rebel video
that you need to review?
As it stands now the database allows search by group, video production group,
speaker, release date, runtime, video type (i.e. hostage, statement, documentary
style), language, primary country, main themes, contains (i.e. vehicular
bombing, IED construction, shooting, statement), addressed to, transcript
and many more technical metadata areas to support exploitation that cannot
be posted here. All the group and individual names are on standardized lists
so you don't have to go guessing as to how we spelled it. You just review
the list and pick the match.
Is there something else that you've wanted or found incredibly helpful in
the past?
If anyone here wants the dog and pony show over WebEx or otherwise, just
shoot me a note directly at
benv[at]intelcenter.com.
Thanks in advance for any feedback. We can have the greatest resource in
the world but if we don't understand how each different community needs to
find and work with the video then it does nothing to forward the mission
and at the end of the day that's what our singular goal is, impact.
- Ben
Fast Company - 28 Sep. 2011
The Netflix Of Terrorism
http://www.fastcompany.com/1783435/netflix-for-terrorists
BY Neal Ungerleider
Terrorist organizations are nothing if not telegenic. Web video tends to
be the preferred way they get messages across and recruit sympathizers. Now
private company IntelCenter, has assembled one of the world's largest collections
of streaming terrorist videos for viewing on demand.
Terrorist organizations love making videos and uploading them to the internet.
It's a quick and effective way of getting their message across--and not just
for potential recruits and sympathizers. A private company, IntelCenter,
has assembled one of the world's largest collections of streaming terrorist
videos for viewing by the military, intelligence and academic communities.
The video archive, called IntelCenter Database: Video Component, contains
approximately 15,000 terrorist and rebel-produced propaganda videos. According
to IntelCenter's Ben Venzke, the archive mainly contains video from "non-nation
state actors, be they small or large, that are actively involved in bombings,
kidnappings, shootings, insurgencies, and the like." In other words: More
FARC and al-Qaeda and fewer creepy, angry teenagers in their bedrooms. Users
who subscribe to the service can instantly watch the videos and search by
keywords and (terrorist) content creators, just as they could on Netflix
or YouTube.
Homeland Security--the sprawling conglomeration of counter-terrorism,
intelligence gathering, surveillance, and fearmongering that arose after
the September 11 attacks--is big business. According to the left-leaning
National Priorities Project, a staggering $69 billion dollars was allocated
by the federal government for homeland security during fiscal year 2011.
This is a massive source of revenue for the many private firms creating services
and products used by federal and local governments. Access to IntelCenter's
video archive doesn't come cheap; individual accounts for government users
go for $9,995/year a piece or $65,000 for group licenses of 6-10 users.
Substantially more affordable packages are available for private security
and academic subscribers that begin at $2,320 annually. The cheaper levels
give the user access to the same content but limit the number of search fields
that can be used.
Subscribers to IntelCenter's services are not limited to the United States;
according to the company, their products are also designed to servvice
intelligence analysts and military in Canada, Australia, Europe and other
regions worldwide.
IntelCenter's Venzke tells Fast Company that his company offers intelligence
service-level video archives to researchers, private security professionals,
corporate securities, universities, and the media. The archive grew out of
the previously existing IntelCenter Database, which offers text-based
background information and reference materials on militant groups.
Users can search terrorist videos on the site by release date, the militant
organization that created it, video producer (ironically enough, jihadists
have formed their own media organizations such as as-Sahab Media), speaker,
language, main themes, and regional focus. Although thousands of terrorist
and militant-produced videos are currently available on the internet--ironically
mainly through mainstream content archivers such as YouTube--the considerable
time spent searching video archives in both English and foreign languages
for a particular video does present a difficulty. One of IntelCenter's strongest
selling points is that they reduce the manpower hours needed to retrieve
older propaganda videos.
Videos viewed through the site stream up to HD quality and can be watched
either in a window or full-screen. Users can also view videos on their
smartphones or tablets; the service is compatible with Android devices as
well as the iPhone or iPad and offers both HTML5 and Flash video. According
to Venzke, the archive "grows at a rate of about 3-20 new videos a day."
Thankfully for intelligence agencies and counter-terrorism investigators,
militant organizations love producing video clips and internet propaganda.
Hezbollah has their own satellite television network with a huge internet
presence and terrorist groups worldwide use YouTube to reach sympathizers
before their videos are (sometimes) pulled down. Just this week, al-Qaeda
in Yemen released the latest issue of their English-language propaganda magazine
online--the PDF-format magazine encouraged readers to target "the populations
of countries that are at war with the Muslims."
The growth market in Homeland Security means that a streaming video site
aimed at intelligence and corporate security is smart business. Police
departments and regional law enforcement around the country generally have
generous funds to spend on Homeland Security; the New York Police Department's
counter-terrorism unit is currently dealing with fallout from an Associated
Press expose. Those big budgets translate into money to spend on all sorts
of tools developed by private firms. More importantly, there are relatively
few public-access databases archiving videos from militant organizations
that can be easily searched without bouncing between English, Arabic, Spanish,
Urdu and other foreign-language queries. Promoting that capability, for
IntelCenter and the many other small companies serving the Homeland Security
industry, can be very profitable.
[Story images: IntelCenter]
For more stories like this, follow [at]fastcompany on Twitter. Email Neal
Ungerleider, the author of this article, here or find him on Twitter and
Google+.
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