Archive for 2023

AI SPY VERSUS AI SPY: The US’s spy system of the future — it’s Sentient. Meet the classified artificial brain being developed by US intelligence programs.

Questions about who and what Sentient monitors are equally persistent and also nearly unanswerable, but there are a few clues about where the program may or may not be peeking. Spy satellites, like the ones used by the NRO [the National Reconnaissance Office], are primarily meant to focus on the world beyond the United States’ borders. And unlike its fellow intelligence agencies — including the NSA and CIA — the NRO hasn’t really been caught up in major domestic-spying scandals. Its biggest recent public upset was probably about the mission patch for the launch of its NROL-39 satellite: it depicts a giant yellow octopus mouth-suctioned to Earth — to North America, actually. Tentacles encircle the planet. The words “NOTHING IS BEYOND OUR REACH” smile in an arc below the cephalopod.

Despite the patch’s sentiment, there are some places where the NRO and Sentient are generally not supposed to reach. In heaven as on Earth, laws protect American citizens from unreasonable search and seizure by their government. “Under the existing statutory regime, Sentient-driven reconnaissance should not be taking place within the US,” says Aftergood. “If it were, that would of course immediately raise privacy and civil liberties concerns, and a whole set of related questions about how that collected information was being used and stored and so on. But right now it shouldn’t be collected in the first place.”

Now who’s being naive, Kay? FBI Used Undercover Agent to Cultivate Sources among Catholic Clergy and Leadership, House Republicans Reveal.

Via Richard Fernandez, who tweets, “The Ukraine 2023 spring offensive will be the first large scale test of space dominance’s effect on ground ops. The US has clear superiority in space assets vs Russia. It will also reveal how effective downstream systems have become.

THAT’S NOT CREEPY AT ALL: Dead birds get new life: New Mexico researchers develop taxidermy bird drones.

Scientists in New Mexico are giving dead birds a new life with an unconventional approach to wildlife research.

A team at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro is taking birds that have been preserved through taxidermy and converting them into drones in order to study flight.

Dr. Mostafa Hassanalian, a mechanical engineering professor who is leading the project, had found that artificial, mechanical birds had not given the results he was looking for.

“We came up with this idea that we can use … dead birds and make them (into) a drone,” he said. “Everything is there … we do reverse engineering.”

Taxidermy bird drones — currently being tested in a purpose-built cage at the university — can be used to understand better the formation and flight patterns of flocks.

Not surprisingly, the “Birds Aren’t Real” guys are having a field day on Twitter in response:

HE’S BEEN ASKED TO RECONSIDER IN VIEW OF THE VIOLENCE AGAINST RILEY GAINES:  Federal Judge Alan B. Johnson has denied the ability to sue anonymously to the seven sorority women suing Kappa Kappa Gamma for inducting a transgender woman into its Wyoming chapter.  They allege that their new “sorority sister” has been ogling them, sometimes with … uh … his male body part at attention.  They have until April 20th to reveal their true names or have their cases dismissed.

HAHA:

DO YOU SMELL IT? Lies lose their power when the deceived stop accepting them as true. If you have a child at or approaching college age, this is one to consider.

BACK TO NAVAL FICTION, I’m currently reading the Bliven Putnam series by James Haley and quite enjoying it. Early US Navy instead of Royal Navy, opening with the campaign against the Barbary Pirates. Well written and entertaining, highly recommended.

OPEN THREAD: Party like it’s Saturday night.

HMM: Why The Accused Document Leaker Had A High Level Security Clearance.

The criminal complaint against Jack Teixeira released Friday disclosed that he possessed a high-level top secret clearance known as TS-SCI, Top Secret – Sensitive Compartmented Information, since 2021.

Teixeira worked as a full time active-duty Air National Guardsman at Otis Air National Guard Base, near Cape Cod, Massachusetts, as a “Cyber Transport Systems Journeyman” — essentially providing IT support for the 102nd Intelligence Wing.

Defense officials told ABC News that having a TS-SCI clearance is typical for Air Force personnel who in order to provide IT support might need access to classified spaces, computers and networks so they could do their jobs.

But the fact that you have a clearance does not mean you have access to everything at that level. That access is based on your “need to know” the information for your job.

I don’t think he needed to know this.

IF YOU CAN OPEN CARRY, SHOULD YOU?

The left has been successful in moving the Overton Window. This might do the same by normalizing firearms. But some people are, uh, . . . triggered.