GCN Home > 04/20/06 web stories
Open-source intel takes on new importance
By Alice Lipowicz, Contributing Staff Writer
New forms of intelligence-gatheringincluding the availability of open-source information on the Internetare becoming increasingly important for fighting terrorism and may even reduce the need for more traditional collection efforts, according to a new report from the Congressional Research Service.

The report, titled Intelligence Issues for Congress, outlines the challenges in intelligence-gathering, analysis and dissemination facing the director of national intelligence and the 15 other federal intelligence agencies in the post-9/11 era, with a large part of the activity is focused on counterterrorism.

While the intelligence community traditionally has relied on signals, imagery and human intelligence, the report said there is now a growing interest in open-source intelligence (OSINT) as well as in measurement and signatures analysis intelligence (MASINT).

Osint refers to an intelligence-gathering approach based on analyzing information collected from open sourcesnamely, from information available to the general public.

The rising dependence on open sourcing is partly due to a requirement for a broad range of information about many regions and subjects throughout the world, instead of the former concentration on military and political issues in a small number of countries, the report said. The need for translation and analysis has increased as well.

Many observers believe that intelligence agencies should be more aggressive in using OSINT; some believe that the availability of OSINT may even reduce the need for certain collection efforts, the report stated.

Another intelligence discipline receiving greater emphasis in recent years is MASINT, a highly technical discipline used by the Defense Intelligence Agency and others in which complex analytical refinements are applied to information collected by signal intelligence and geospatial imagery.

A key problem has been retaining personnel with expertise in MASINT systems who are offered more remunerative positions in private industry, the report said.

Alice Lipowicz is a staff writer for Government Computer News sister publication, Washington Technology.

More news on related topics: Homeland Security, IT Management