From: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
To: users@ssz.com (SSZ User Mail List)
Message Hash: 9751031c9bbfe203a567c9094b9f68a713c1d0d551db897b8be9140b02e302c3
Message ID: <199801070542.XAA29574@einstein.ssz.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1998-01-07 05:18:24 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 7 Jan 1998 13:18:24 +0800
From: Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Jan 1998 13:18:24 +0800
To: users@ssz.com (SSZ User Mail List)
Subject: Hi-tech anti-terrorism... [CNN]
Message-ID: <199801070542.XAA29574@einstein.ssz.com>
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> GADGET WARFARE: HIGH-TECH ANTI-TERRORISM
>
> January 6, 1998
> Web posted at: 9:34 p.m. EST (0234 GMT)
>
> From Netly News Writer Declan McCullagh
>
> For a country with no real military rivals, the U.S. still manages
> to find an amazing number of enemies. Terrorists top the list of
> anti-American villains, according to a Pentagon report released last
> month.
>
> The 100-page document, called "Responses to Transnational Threats,"
> describes how the military should respond to the threat of saboteurs
> and bombers aiming for violence, not victory. The solution,
> according to the Pentagon, is to develop a set of gadgets that would
> make even James Bond jealous.
>
> Micro-robots
>
> A spy camera scuttling through the underbrush? Yes, disguised as "an
> insect, a small pebble, or a stick." The report calls for the
> development of "micro-robots" that walk or fly and can beam video,
> audio and infrared signals back to their operators: "These sensors
[deleted text]
> Sticky electronics
>
> Think SpiderMan's spidertracers, only smaller. "Sticky electronics"
> adhere to a suspected terrorist's clothing, hair, luggage or vehicle
> and report his location. These almost microscopic gizmos tune in to
> satellite signals and transmit their exact latitude and longitude.
[deleted text]
> Bio-sniffers
>
> Go lie down, Fido. Soon drug-sniffing dogs may be replaced by even
> more sensitive, digital noses. If suspects have been handling nukes,
> biological weapons or high explosives, the military hopes to be able
> to sniff substance traces from items like passports. "As future
[text deleted]
> technology is improved, antigens might then be detected at national
> entry portals as trace contamination on emigration documents or
> passports, by urine analysis or by other means." Look for companies
> to use this as a more sensitive (if not more reliable) type of drug
> testing.
>
> The Internet
>
> The Net shouldn't be viewed as "a vulnerability." That view "loses
> sight of many potential benefits," the Pentagon explains. To the
> spooks, the Net "is an underexploited information-acquisition
> resource" that "allows for remote and anonymous participation in
> online 'chat' forums that might provide insight into dissident group
> activities." (Look out, alt.fan.militia!) The military also wants to
> create a "secure, transnational threat information infrastructure"
> -- at a cost of a mere $300 million.
>
> Data mining
>
> If you worried about the FBI's jones for access to your data, wait
> 'til you find out what the military hopes to do. The Pentagon wants
> authority to sift through private-sector databases in hopes of
> tracking down, say, the World Trade Center bombers before they
> strike. The plan is to incorporate "real-time data on international
> border crossings, real-time cargo manifests, global financial
[deleted text]
> Smart software
>
> Once you've got the databases, how do you use 'em? The military says
> the answer is "groupware" and "intelligent software agents" that
> "can be focused to search for a confluence of events in multiple
> databases or for goals over time." Consumer marketers will finally
> be able to determine the commonalities between the Hajj, Promise
> Keeper gatherings and Burning Man.
>
> So would military budgets. In a world where even the Pentagon admits
> that the U.S. is the only remaining superpower, the defense
> community argues that terrorism threats justify their budgets.
> "Nothing will be more challenging to the protection of our citizens,
> soldiers and our way of life than the threats of weapons of mass
> destruction and terrorism," General John Shalikashvili, chairman of
[text deleted]
____________________________________________________________________
| |
| Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make |
| violent revolution inevitable. |
| |
| John F. Kennedy |
| |
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| -====~~mm-'`-```-mm --'- Jim Choate |
| ravage@ssz.com |
| 512-451-7087 |
|____________________________________________________________________|
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1998-01-07 (Wed, 7 Jan 1998 13:18:24 +0800) - Hi-tech anti-terrorism… [CNN] - Jim Choate <ravage@ssz.com>