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CIA Open Source Center Follows Foreign Twitter, Facebook Accounts

Cia Open Source Center

KIMBERLY DOZIER   11/ 4/11 01:52 PM ET   AP

McLEAN, Va. — In an anonymous industrial park, CIA analysts who jokingly call themselves the "ninja librarians" are mining the mass of information people publish about themselves overseas, tracking everything from common public opinion to revolutions.

The group's effort gives the White House a daily snapshot of the world built from tweets, newspaper articles and Facebook updates.

The agency's Open Source Center sometimes looks at 5 million tweets a day. The analysts are also checking out TV news channels, local radio stations, Internet chat rooms – anything overseas that people can access and contribute to openly.

The Associated Press got an apparently unprecedented view of the center's operations, including a tour of the main facility. The AP agreed not to reveal its exact location and to withhold the identities of some who work there because much of the center's work is secret.

From Arabic to Mandarin, from an angry tweet to a thoughtful blog, the analysts gather the information, often in a native tongue. They cross-reference it with a local newspaper or a clandestinely intercepted phone conversation. From there, they build a picture sought by the highest levels at the White House. There might be a real-time peek, for example, at the mood of a region after the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden, or perhaps a prediction of which Mideast nation seems ripe for revolt.

Yes, they saw the uprising in Egypt coming; they just didn't know exactly when revolution might hit, says the center's director, Doug Naquin.

The center already had "predicted that social media in places like Egypt could be a game-changer and a threat to the regime," he said in an interview.

The CIA facility was set up in response to a recommendation by the 9/11 Commission, its first priority to focus on counterterrorism and counterproliferation. Its predecessor organization had its staff heavily cut in the 1990s – something the CIA's management has vowed to keep from happening again, with new budget reductions looming across the national security spectrum.

The center's several hundred analysts – the actual number is classified – track a broad range of subjects, including Chinese Internet access and the mood on the street in Pakistan.

While most analysts are based in Virginia, they also are scattered throughout U.S. embassies worldwide to get a step closer to their subjects.

The center's analysis ends up in President Barack Obama's daily intelligence briefing in one form or another almost every day. The material is often used to answer questions Obama poses to his inner circle of intelligence advisers when they give him the morning rundown of threats and trouble spots.

"The OSC's focus is overseas, collecting against foreign intelligence issues," said CIA spokeswoman Jennifer Youngblood. "Looking at social media outlets overseas is just a small part of what this skilled organization does," she said. "There is no effort to collect on Americans."

The most successful open source analysts, Naquin said, are something like the heroine of the crime novel "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo," a quirky, irreverent computer hacker who "knows how to find stuff other people don't know exists."

An analyst with a master's degree in library science and multiple languages, especially one who grew up speaking another language, makes "a powerful open source officer," Naquin said.

The center had started focusing on social media after watching the Twitter-sphere rock the Iranian regime during the Green Revolution of 2009, when thousands protested the results of the elections that kept Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in power. "Farsi was the third largest presence in social media blogs at the time on the Web," Naquin said.

After bin Laden was killed in Pakistan in May, the CIA followed Twitter to give the White House a snapshot of world public opinion.

Since tweets can't necessarily be pegged to a geographic location, the analysts broke down reaction by language. The result: The majority of Urdu tweets, the language of Pakistan, and Chinese tweets, were negative. China is a close ally of Pakistan's. Officials in Pakistan protested the raid as an affront to their nation's sovereignty, a sore point that continues to complicate U.S.-Pakistani relations.

When President Obama gave his speech addressing Mideast issues a few weeks after the raid, the tweet response over the next 24 hours came in negative from Turkey, Egypt, Yemen, Algeria, the Persian Gulf and Israel, too. Tweets from speakers of Arabic and Turkic contended that Obama favored Israel, while Hebrew tweets denounced the speech as pro-Arab.

In the following days, major news media came to the same conclusion, as did analysis by the covert side of U.S. intelligence based on intercepts and human intelligence gathered in the region.

The center is also in the process of comparing its social media results with the track record of polling organizations, trying to see which produces more accurate results, Naquin said.

"We do what we can to caveat that we may be getting an overrepresentation of the urban elite," said Naquin, acknowledging that only a small slice of the population in many areas being monitored has access to computers and Internet. But he points out that access to social media sites via cellphones is growing in such areas as Africa, meaning a "wider portion of the population than you might expect is sounding off and holding forth than it might appear if you count the Internet hookups in a given country."

Sites such as Facebook and Twitter have become a key resource for following a fast-moving crisis such as the riots that raged across Bangkok in April and May of last year, the center's deputy director said. The AP agreed not to identify him because he sometimes still works undercover in foreign countries.

As director, Naquin is identified publicly by the agency although the location of the center is kept secret to deter attacks, whether physical or electronic.

Naquin says the next generation of social media will probably be closed-loop, subscriber-only cellphone networks, like the ones the Taliban uses to send messages among hundreds of followers at a time in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Those networks can be penetrated only by technical eavesdropping by branches of U.S. intelligence, such as the National Security Agency – but Naquin predicts his covert colleagues will find a way to adapt, as the enemy does.

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McLEAN, Va. — In an anonymous industrial park, CIA analysts who jokingly call themselves the "ninja librarians" are mining the mass of information people publish about themselves overseas, track...
McLEAN, Va. — In an anonymous industrial park, CIA analysts who jokingly call themselves the "ninja librarians" are mining the mass of information people publish about themselves overseas, track...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TrgdyAnn
Remember what the Doorman said, 'Feed Your Head'
01:06 PM on 11/15/2011
No worries here. I'm not a Foreigner,....LoL
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chedet
Le Panda
02:07 AM on 11/07/2011
Snooping is so rude. If they want to know about me just ask for my permission and add me as a friend.
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12:03 AM on 11/07/2011
If the CIA is reading my posts, I'd be flattered. Its an intelligence gathering operation, isn't it? And I'm a source of intelligence, right? OK, then.
JWoode
yes.. my micro bio is meaningless
10:56 PM on 11/06/2011
Post a list of the ingredients to build an exploding refrigerator magnet and a train schedule then see how fast you hear funny noises on your phone.
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perturbedintexas
Support our wounded warriors
04:46 PM on 11/06/2011
The whole world is watching
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brandon20678
Corporations have 99 problems and I'm 1
01:09 PM on 11/06/2011
This well be large amounts of data for the C.I.A.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
10:46 AM on 11/06/2011
Nothing new...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tunghoy
My other car is a TARDIS
01:03 AM on 11/06/2011
I wonder if the CIA can tell us how many people are wasting time playing Angry Birds instead of working, or how many people are sharing videos of a cat playing the piano.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CarlIII
Liberal Virginian living in Remlap Alabama
11:32 AM on 11/06/2011
My guess is yes. For instance If you go to a cannabis site (there are a lot of growing and seed purchasing sites) you can bet your Mac address is turned over to the DEA. The government is tracking everything and everybody. And it will only get worse until we force them to stop. How we can accomplish that I haven't got a clue.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skypilotbaby
Egg
01:04 PM on 11/05/2011
Hell, anyone can go online and snoop. Why are we paying a bunch of professional CIA employees to look at the facebook pages of a bunch of friggin Arab dating sites, used camel sales and Death to American posts?

Nessus
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Rude Monk
No God can stop a hungry man
11:18 AM on 11/05/2011
So the corporations paid for the dismantling of the ussr because they wanted to build something like that in the good old USA?
We know they don't like competition but who really supports all these mind numbing gov ags?
End the wars and they will became redundant.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
12:16 AM on 11/05/2011
think of big brother everytiime you update you Facebook page, or twit someone now. Then again, you could go on being numb and just put your whole life on the net for anyone to see, steal, stalk down and rape, rob, kidnap or murder. Its your choice. It use to be a free country you know
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ONLYGRAYCLOUDS
Karma will get you
10:23 PM on 11/04/2011
I understand the CIA has to investigate things that could pose a threat to the U.S but anytime someone has the power to find out personal details about a individual its a privacy issue and poses a concern of who is keeping tabs on you .Twitter and facebook is a easy way to get hijacked and tricked into giving people your info thats why i am glad i dont have accounts with either network
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CarlIII
Liberal Virginian living in Remlap Alabama
11:35 AM on 11/06/2011
Me too. I think it's creepy how much very personal stuff people are publishing for everyone to see. Odd very odd.
ccsysglf
question the question
09:46 PM on 11/04/2011
soon, cia will be tracking the cia. my best memory has it no domestic spying......
ccsysglf
question the question
10:01 PM on 11/04/2011
but i could be wrong, because the police in america dont beat protesters either........
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CarlIII
Liberal Virginian living in Remlap Alabama
11:39 AM on 11/06/2011
Yea that's why they have the NSA . They are scanning every phone call, text message and web search. It is costing billions but big brother doesn't care.
ccsysglf
question the question
12:18 PM on 11/06/2011
they can easily cover their cost, $400 toilet seats etc.. budgets are funny things.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miltjones65
liberals should rule
07:12 PM on 11/04/2011
They can track me all they want. I'm not doing anything subversive. You radical Republicans might want to watch it though. They are looking for people trying to over throw our government! Or harm our President!
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ONLYGRAYCLOUDS
Karma will get you
10:28 PM on 11/04/2011
i agree and the president worked the CIA before he became president dont think it would be smart to threaten the president or the U.S but people say dumb things all the time it doesnt mean they are going to do it but it does raise a red flag
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CarlIII
Liberal Virginian living in Remlap Alabama
11:42 AM on 11/06/2011
Who knows what they do with the information. Blackmail? false charges? Political control? it's pretty diabolical.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sock Monkey
Deceive. Inveigle. Obfuscate. The DC mantra.
07:11 PM on 11/04/2011
At&T was in bed with the NSA YEARS ago. This revelation shouldn't surprise anyone.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
12:19 AM on 11/05/2011
years ago? wasn't during the Bush terror that they were caught with listening rooms next to ATT switching rooms all over the country? It was exposed and in the press for weeks. And no word that it was really ever dismantled or stopped.