Title :
Challenges in Open Source Intelligence
Author_Institution :
OSVision Ltd., London, UK
Abstract :
A host of tools and techniques are now available for data mining on the Internet. The explosion in social media usage and people reporting brings a new range of problems related to trust and credibility. Traditional media monitoring systems have now reached such sophistication that real time situation monitoring is possible. The challenge though is deciding what reports to believe, how to index them and how to process the data. Vested interests allow groups to exploit both social media and traditional media reports for propaganda purposes. The importance of collecting reports from all sides in a conflict and of balancing claims and counter-claims becomes more important as ease of publishing increases. Today the challenge is no longer accessing open source information but in the tagging, indexing, archiving and analysis of the information. This requires the development of general-purpose and domain specific knowledge bases. Intelligence tools are needed which allow an analyst to rapidly access relevant data covering an evolving situation, ranking sources covering both facts and opinions.
Keywords :
Internet; data mining; information retrieval; public domain software; Internet; archiving; data covering; data mining; indexing; intelligence tool; media monitoring system; open source information; open source intelligence; real time situation monitoring; social media usage; tagging; Data mining; Databases; Internet; Knowledge based systems; Media; Monitoring; Terrorism; Information Extraction; Information Retrieval; OSINT; Terrorism Forecasting;
Conference_Titel :
Intelligence and Security Informatics Conference (EISIC), 2011 European
Conference_Location :
Athens
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1464-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-7695-4406-9
DOI :
10.1109/EISIC.2011.41