Artificial intelligence linked to Bin Laden raid is being used to find future threats

After raiding Usama Bin Laden's compound, the government used artificial intelligence to discover future al-Qaida plans.
That CIA-led raid took place on May 2, 2011, killing Bin Laden, Americaās most wanted terrorist and the founder of al-Qaida, the group responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks.
āThe large quantity of materials collected from the compound required time for a thorough review,ā the CIA said in a report about the raid, adding the agency "led a multi-agency task force to prioritize, catalogue, and analyze them for intelligence about al-Qa`idaās affiliates, plans and intentions and current threats.ā
Among those materials was a treasure trove of documents, according to Brian Drake, Defense Intelligence Agency's Science and Technology director of artificial intelligence, who spoke during a recent U.S. Department of Defense video conference.
The Defence Intelligence Agencyās (DIA) National Media Exploitation Center (NMEC) worked with the CIA, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and others to collect the data.
The NMECās mission, which Drake focused on in the call, is to exploit captured media from the field.
āSo when we do a raid ā for example, the Usama Bin Laden raid ā that media that was captured in that raid wasā¦shipped over to our folksā¦[and] in the process of going through all those documents, they discovered future plans that Al Qaeda had, the perspectives that Bin Laden had and so forth,ā Drake said during the conference call.
Drake went on to explain that for the last 15 years, NMEC has been investing in AI.
āTheyāve made investments in text recognition technology, object detection, machine translation, audio and image categorizationā¦what that allows them to do is go through petabytes of data they get from document exploitation. That results in tens of billions of pieces of data,ā he added.
āWhat they have successfully done is deployed a capability to go through all of those pieces of data and then drive the kind of insights we got from the [Bin Laden's] Abbottabad compound raid and do it extremely quickly,ā Drake explained.
āBy doing that, we can warn and alert on things that are emerging threats or plots that are coming up or even mysteries that we didnāt understand before,ā he said.
Paul Stanley, the Chief Engineer for the Office of Information Technology Services, the IT component for the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), discussed how machine learning, a type of AI, is used.
ā[Instead of piecemeal analysis] what weāre able to do now with machine learning is supervised machine learning,ā he said.
āWeāve got this corpus of data from years and years and years of human [data] exploitation," he continued. "Letās take the finding of that human exploitation and letās train a model to predict, as documents come in, to give analysts a heads up that this may be relevant to them or this is definitely something they donāt care about.
Artificial intelligence linked to Bin Laden raid is being used to find future threats
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