The CIA linked to Internet Privacy Watchdog! [Published]

skunkskunk Regular
edited July 2011 in Spurious Generalities
The thread is labeled text file because its a wall of text...In the following posts I will provide diagrams and more information on this subject.

Note: This is a repost made by an amkon member mojo, and sheds a bit more light on intelligence agency operations on the internet.

The CIA linked to Internet Privacy Watchdog!

The CIA and your Online Privacy.

In-Q-Tel is a venture capital firm set up by the CIA to fund technologies and business's that they believe can further their intelligence gathering capabilities.
There are some disturbing links between In-Q-Tel and many other online businesses some of which are involved in protecting your online privacy.

At first glance TRUSTe seems to be just another privacy protection agency without any links to the CIA.
The first part of this post will deal with TRUSTe and previous privacy concerns dealing with TRUSTe and their member companies, their acceptance of investment and their move to a "for profit" organization and finally the links connecting TRUSTe, Accel Partners, In-Q-Tel and the CIA and other intelligence gathering and Government arms.

TRUSTe is an online privacy firm that certifies many sites on the internet.

The TRUSTe site.

http://www.truste.org/

And a description of them on Wikipedia.

[ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRUSTe"]TRUSTe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]
TRUSTe is an independent, privately held[1] organization best known for its Web Privacy Seal. TRUSTe runs the world’s largest privacy seal program, with more than 2,000 Web sites certified,[2] including the major internet portals and leading brands such as IBM, Oracle Corporation, Intuit and eBay. TRUSTe states its purpose is to establish trusting relationships between individuals and online organizations based on respect for personal identity and information in the evolving networked world.

TRUSTe member list.

http://www.truste.org/about/member_list.php

There are many instances that can be easily found using search engines that are not quite so complimentary of TRUSTe and their practices, heres just a few.

http://www.wired.com/techbiz/media/news/2002/04/51624
But Yahoo's recent announcement of sweeping changes in the way it will use customer data collected under previous policies has many calling Truste's seal as meaningless as an Andersen audit.
Even Esther Dyson, the high-profile technologist who played a major role in Truste's launch five years ago, says she is "disappointed in what ended up becoming of it."
By its own account, Truste was conceived at Dyson's industry-leading PC Forum conference in 1996. Dyson credits others with the concept, but she pushed both publicly and privately for the establishment of the nonprofit company and adoption of its "trustmark," which certifies that online companies comply with their own stated privacy policies.
Truste makes no attempt to set privacy policies. It merely ensures that companies clearly state their own rules for handling customer data, and then adhere to them.


nytimes.com
Is the best way to protect the public good to go private?
That is the view of Truste, a 10-year-old nonprofit organization that certifies that Web sites meet some minimum standards to protect the privacy of their users. The group is converting to for-profit status and selling the bulk of its newly created stock to Accel Partners, the venture capital firm that backed eBay and Facebook.
The amount of Accel’s investment was not disclosed, but people involved in the transaction said it is around $10 million.
In many ways, Truste has already been run like a business. Most of its $6 million in annual revenue comes from charging site owners for the right to display the Truste seal. This has long raised questions about whether the organization is appropriately tough on the companies it certifies.
For example, it does not always tell the public if it discovers violations of its principles, even if the violations are so egregious that it kicks a site out of its program.

http://www.benedelman.org/news/031808-1.html
To this day, Coupons.com is in breach of TRUSTe's rules, and TRUSTe knows it. Yet Coupons.com remains listed on TRUSTe's whitelist as if its practices are beyond reproach and as if the company is in good standing vis-a-vis TRUSTe's rules. That's outrageous, and users should demand better.

Coupons.com is still on the TRUSTe member list now.

Here are some of TRUSTe's sponsors, many of them have serious privacy concerns.

http://www.truste.org/about/sponsors.php
Sponsors of the TRUSTe® program recognize the vital importance of customer trust to their businesses. Sponsors provide critical support for the development of new programs such as wireless, email, and other privacy initiatives. Some of our valued sponsors include:
· AOL
· Intuit
· MAXAMINE
· Microsoft
Benefits of sponsorship include:
· Seat on an advisory panel or initiative
· Joint press release announcing our joint commitment to privacy advocacy
· Company logo displayed throughout TRUSTe Web site and all appropriate marketing collateral
· Rotating sponsorship of one of TRUSTe's newsletters
· Marketing exposure at key industry events
· ...and much more!

TRUSTe sponsors.

www.searchenginestrategies.com
MAXAMINE satisfies the diverse and dynamic requirements across the enterprise with a single, coherent and fully integrated solution. With MAXAMINE, you can ensure the quality of search engine implementations, compliance with privacy, accessibility, usability, link integrity; screen for offensive content and inappropriate links; verify traffic and advertising tags, and analyze your site using custom search criteria, and quality standards, alerting, and issue management capabilities.
MAXAMINE serves leading commercial and government clients around the world, including AOL, EDS, Intuit, KPMG, WebMD, Sun Microsystems, Oracle, Wal-Mart, Legal & General, and Cadbury, as well as the U.S. State Department, Treasury Department, Department of Homeland Security, GSA, FAA, EPA, FDIC, IRS, the Victorian Government of Australia and many more.

Accenture Completes Acquisition of Maxamine

Maxamine, a privately held company founded in 1997, provides testing and optimization services to help companies improve the marketing effectiveness and financial returns from their websites and other digital marketing investments. Maxamine’s services include evaluating websites to identify implementation problems that undermine online marketing performance, as well as providing guidance to help clients improve the optimization of their websites, enhance the customer experience and decrease privacy-related and other risks.
Stephen Kirkby, Ph.D., a founder of Maxamine, said, “We’re very pleased with the opportunities that this acquisition affords the talented people of Maxamine and the greater breadth of online marketing services that the companies with which we’ve had the pleasure to work with over the years will have available to them now via Accenture.”

The closing of the Maxamine acquisition follows Accenture’s recent acquisition of Memetrics, which helps companies improve the impact of their online marketing campaigns by identifying which content will deliver the best results for targeted customer sets.

Here's just one of the products that MAXMINE provides.

wareseeker.com/Web-Development
Maxamine Web Analyst Professional is a complete web site management solution that can scan any publicly accessible site, visualize site structure, and perform a complete site analysis and intuitive mapping of traffic log file activity. This product will enable small and medium enterprises to conduct extensive analysis of their Web sites and those of their competitors.Maxamine Web Analyst is much more than just a link checker or log analyzer – it offers comprehensive navigation structure visualization and site reports, site search and complete traffic analysis (traffic reports and visualization on web maps). At a glance, you will see most popular pages and major traffic corridors in your site, as well as problem areas such as slow site navigation, broken links, non-returning and hard-to-reach pages, and much more.This product is ideal for scanning web sites up to 500 pages in size, which makes it an invaluable tool for small and medium enterprises, consultants, Web integrators and ISPs.

Intuit.

http://www.intuit.com/

http://www.intuit.com/about_intuit/profile/
Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ: INTU) is an American software company that develops financial and tax preparation software

http://www.crn.com/software/18830883
Hoping to win back alienated customers, personal software maker Intuit (NSDQ:INTU) Inc. is formally apologizing to users of its popular TurboTax program who rebelled against an anti-piracy feature the company introduced last year.
"I've talked one-on-one with quite a few customers, so I know this caused some of you considerable hassle and inconvenience," TurboTax general manager Tom Allanson wrote in an open letter of apology.
Mountain View-based Intuit plans to publish the letter as an advertisement in Thursday's editions of USA Today and The Wall Street Journal. The letter also will be posted on several Web sites.
Intuit is seeking forgiveness as it prepares to sell the 2003 edition of TurboTax , a program that generated $423 million, or 26 percent, of the company's revenue in its last fiscal year.
The unusual step serves as another reminder of the aggravation Intuit caused with the anti-piracy measure, known as "product activation," which was designed to prevent buyers from giving the tax program to people who hadn't paid to use it.
Intuit hoped to boost TurboTax sales with an activation code that chained the program to a single computer. The company instead faced an angry backlash from customers who abhorred the restrictions and feared product activation might allow Intuit to spy on their computer hard drives.

AOL.

http://www.grc.com/downloaders.htm
As you will see on the page below, if you use the RealNetworks RealDownload, Netscape/AOL Smart Download, or NetZip Download Demon utilities in their default configuration . . .

EVERY TIME you use one of these utilities to download ANY FILE from ANYWHERE on the Internet, the complete "URL address" of the file, along with a UNIQUE ID TAG that has been assigned to YOUR machine, and — in the case of Netscape's SmartDownload only — YOUR computer's individual Internet IP address, is immediately transmitted to the program's publisher.

This allows a database of your entire, personal, file download history to be assembled and uniquely associated with your individual computer . . . for whatever purpose the program's publishers may have today, or tomorrow.

Does AOL spy on you

networks.silicon.com
A game distributed with new versions of AOL Instant Messenger does not respect users' privacy, critics say.
AOL began offering games along with the latest version of its instant messenger, and now some customers are worried that the company is playing with them, too.
People who use AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) have started complaining on AOL message boards after software bundled with AIM 5.5 began showing up in "spyware" scans. The popular chat application includes games from WildTangent, which has a tool that reports back to the company every time someone uses its products.


www.spywareinfo.com
An investigation by noted privacy advocate Richard Smith found proof that once again, the rumors were true. Using a port sniffer, Smith found that each time a DVD movie is played on a computer which is online, Media Player 8, which ships with all copies of Windows XP, contacts a Microsoft web server to get title and chapter information for the DVD. In violation of Microsoft's stated privacy policy, the server was setting a cookie with a unique identification code that enabled Microsoft to track what DVDs were being played on that particular computer. Rather than acknowledge that they had violated the privacy of their users, Microsoft merely shrugged and said "oops" before updating their privacy policy to include the behavior that they had been caught engaging in.
This wasn't the first time Microsoft has been caught lying in its privacy policy. Last year, an FTC investigation concluded that Microsoft made false promises about how secure it kept the consumer information it collected. The Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection at the FTC, Howard Beales, said that Microsoft had been collecting information about the day and time consumers logged into participating Passport Web sites without their knowledge, and storing data for longer than it claimed.

Here’s another company I pulled from the TRUSTe member list.

Nebuad.

http://www.nebuad.com/

First here’s Nebuads Company page, with link to their privacy policy, it makes for interesting reading.

http://www.nebuad.com/company/company.php

And this report regarding a senate hearing into privacy issues of online advertising. This is from July 2008.

www.fiercetelecom.com
On the eve of a Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee hearing on the privacy issues raised by online advertising, yet another cable company has pulled back from using NebuAd to track its customers. Wide Open West, a Denver-based cable provider that's been using the NebuAd since March, is ending its test of the controversial software.

Tomorrow's hearing on the Hill will give critics, who say the software and others like it violate wiretap laws because it allows carriers to track customers' communications, an opportunity to publicly air their grievances.

Cable companies and telcos say they need software like NebuAd-and it's British comrade-in-arms, Phorm-to help them develop targeted advertising for subgroups of Internet and television service users. The ad dollars, they say, are critical to their growth. Check out this Wall Street Journal story for a different look at the controversy.


And the Wall Street Journal chimes in.

online.wsj.com/article
In the past few weeks, phone operator CenturyTel Inc. and cable provider Charter Communications Inc. shelved plans to use ad-targeting technology from Silicon Valley start-up NebuAd due to privacy concerns raised by their customers and lawmakers.
Last week, another cable company, Denver-based Wide Open West, pulled the plug on NebuAd's software, which it had used since March to track its customers on the Web and subdivide them by their ...

http://www.jiad.org/article8
Apart from procedural difficulties in filing a complaint against a website, TRUSTe has not removed a seal once in more than three years for privacy violation (Hunter, 2000). There have been orders to remove the seal for those who have not renewed payment of fees. An email from the author querying how many members it had and how many have had their seals revoked was not answered.
TRUSTe's difficulties have been highlighted in the case of Real Audio and AOL. In AOL's case, a complaint was filed about the company passing information to third parties. AOL's answer was that the TRUSTe seal applied only to the http://www.aol.com site, not the members.aol.com site (Hunter, 2000).
In the case of Real Audio, the company's software, RealJukebox, surreptitiously monitored and collected data about the listening habits and some other activities of its users (Robinson, 1999). The company apologized but was never punished by TRUSTe because this activity was not covered by the terms of the TRUSTe seal.

An excellent article.

Here’s the abstract.

http://nms.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/8/6/1009
There were few differences in the privacy practices between seal authorities: TRUSTe and BBBOnLine participants offered about the same degree of privacy protection assurances and they were equal with regard to the amount or depth of personal information they requested. Notably, unsealed sites offered nearly equal privacy assurances and made fewer personal information requests than the sealed sites. However, seal program participants did provide superior access to information and assurances of data security.

And here, the complete article in PDF.

http://nms.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/8/6/1009


Now TRUSTe is moving from a "not for profit" organization to a "for profit" organization, how would this affect how they deal with privacy concerns.

www.paidcontent.org
TRUSTe, an organization that certifies websites for having good privacy practices, is turning into a for-profit enterprise, and has taken an unspecified investment from VC firm Accel. Saul Hansell at Bits cites sources putting the funding at $10 million. You’ve probably seen their seal of approval on some of the 2,400 sites they monitor. Like the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval, it’s supposed to convey a sense of, well, trust, to users, by showing certification from a third party. With the investment, the company plans to expand and being targeting emerging areas, like social networking and location-based services, each of which brings a whole host of privacy issues that are still just getting unpacked.

Here's TRUSTe's press release.

http://truste.org/about/press_release/07_15_08.php
In response to increasing threats to consumer privacy, TRUSTe, the recognized authority on privacy best practices on the Internet today, announced the completion of its first round of financing from Accel Partners, a leading Silicon Valley venture firm. The investment will enable TRUSTe to create state-of-the-art monitoring systems to stay ahead of technology advances with new tools, products and best practices that facilitate trust between businesses and consumers.
“The Board of Directors is extremely pleased that Accel Partners has stepped forward to fuel TRUSTe’s future growth,” said Ralph Terkowitz, Chairman of the Board of TRUSTe. “We believe that Accel Partners, one of the most respected investors in venture capital, will serve as a perfect partner to guide and energize the success of TRUSTe as it expands to address new privacy frontiers.”

Who are Accel Partners?

Here's there homepage.

http://www.accel.com/

And Accel backed companies.

http://www.accel.com/company/index.php

Remember Accel is the company that has effectively bought out TRUSTe.

doyoufacebook.blogspot.com
The second round of funding into Facebook ($US12.7 million) came from venture capital firm Accel Partners. Its manager James Breyer was formerly chairman of the National Venture Capital Association, and served on the board with Gilman Louie, CEO of In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm established by the CIA in 1999. One of the company's key areas of expertise is in "data mining technologies".

How would you feel about being able to be tracked via your cellphone no matter where you are.

Richard Wong from Accel partners doesn't think it's a big deal.

www.mindfully.org/Technology
Some in the industry think wireless carriers are being too skittish. Richard Wong, a partner at venture-capital firm Accel Partners, says "operators are sometimes too careful around this issue and are stifling innovation to some degree." He says the industry isn't taking into account that younger consumers have a much more relaxed view about what constitutes an invasion of privacy than their parents.

So are you much more relaxed about privacy issues?

Personally i like to have my privacy protected, particulalry from Government Intelligence Organizations.

Accenture is the company that bought out MAXIMINE, one of TRUSTe's sponsors.

gov_sues_accent.html
The Justice Department has joined three whistleblower lawsuits targeting Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard and consulting giant Accenture, all of which prosecutors say defrauded the government of millions of dollars through kickbacks and rebates on massive government IT projects, according to an announcement Thursday.
The suits center on Accenture, which the government hired to help it evaluate new technology and make sure the government got the right equipment at a fair price. But the government charges that instead Accenture made $4 million cash in kickbacks from companies who landed contracts with the government through Accenture's recommendations.

Pdf's of the complaints filed available at the bottom of the page linked to above.

So what exactly is Data Mining?

[ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_mining"]Data mining - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]
Data mining is the process of sorting through large amounts of data and picking out relevant information. It is usually used by business intelligence organizations, and financial analysts, but is increasingly being used in the sciences to extract information from the enormous data sets generated by modern experimental and observational methods
There are also privacy and human rights concerns associated with data mining, specifically regarding the source of the data analyzed. Data mining provides information that may be difficult to obtain otherwise. When the data collected involves individual people, there are many questions concerning privacy, legality, and ethics.[5] In particular, data mining government or commercial data sets for national security or law enforcement purposes, such as in the Total Information Awareness Program, has raised privacy concerns


TRUSTe's management team.

http://www.truste.org/about/management.php

James Breyer was mentioned in an above quote as having served on the same board with Gilman Louie who headed up In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital arm.

Associations between the CIA and Accel Partners, the firm who is buying TRUSTe.

This is from the CIA website.

www.cia.gov
The media was drawn to a small corporation in Washington, DC that had just unveiled its existence and the hiring of its first CEO, Gilman Louie. Mr. Louie described the Corporation, called In-Q-It, as having been formed "...to ensure that the CIA remains at the cutting edge of information technology advances and capabilities."

Gilman Louie. ;)

Now James Breyer from Accel Partners the VC firm investing in TRUSTe.

http://pipl.com/directory/people/James/Breyer
5 quick facts about James Breyer:

Breyer is a Managing Partner of Accel Partners, a venture capital firm... Source: Mr James Breyer Profile - Forbes.com [URL="http://www.forbes.com]"]www.forbes.com][/URL]

Breyer was a man who served on NVCA's board with Gilman Louie, the CEO of In-Q-Tel... Source: currybear.com... [currybear.com]

James Breyer has been a Director of RealNetworks since October 1995... Source: sec.edgar-online.com... [sec.edgar-online.com]

Breyer has served as a General Partner of Accel Partners in Palo Alto, California since 1990... Source: RealNetworks, Inc. > Board of Directors www.realnetworks.com

Breyer is an officer, 4321916 shares owned by... Source: REALNETWORKS INC www.shareholder.com

Nevermind the privacy concerns of RealNetworks but James Breyer served on the board of NVCA with Gilman Louie CEO of In-Q-Tel owned by the CIA, with connections to DARPA, DOD and lots of other alphabet agency’s.

Here’s a NY Times article in which James Breyer and Gilman Louie are both quoted.

nytimes.com
Mr. Louie said today that the purpose of the new company would be to move information technology to the agency more quickly than traditional Government procurement processes allow. The agency, he said, was struggling with many of the same aspects of the Internet that are vexing to other Web surfers, including privacy and security.
''The current model isn't working,'' Mr. Louie said. ''The technology world has totally changed, and one day the C.I.A. woke up and realized they needed to go through the same change.''
The new company will supply venture capital in some cases, and in others it will hire contractors or partner with entrepreneurs in four areas: integrating Internet technology and applications into the C.I.A.'s work; developing new security and privacy technologies; nurturing data mining technologies to take better advantage of the agency's vast storehouses of records, and modernizing the agency's computer systems.
Mr. Louie said that none of In-Q-It's work would be classified and that the organization would not be limited to the four areas he outlined.
''There are a number of models on which the jury is still out,'' said James Breyer, managing partner of Accel Partners, a venture firm in Palo Alto, Calif.
Companies like Lucent Technologies and the AT&T Corporation have become venture investors in the valley in recent years, he noted, and SRI Research International had less success in trying to spin out its research projects with an internal venture arm.
''The most important aspect is to have an outstanding outside management effort overseeing the process,'' he said. ''It appears in this effort the C.I.A. has chosen well.''

It seems that rather than just passing aquaintances Mr Louie and Mr Breyer have a number of connections to each other.

Jame's Breyer is an Investor/board member of BBN Technologies.

www.accel.com
Jim is currently on the Board of Directors of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc (WMT), where he is the Lead/Presiding Independent Director, and Chairman of the Strategic Planning and Finance Committee. He also serves on the board of Marvel Entertainment (MVL) where he is the founding Chairman of the Strategic Planning and Finance Committee. Jim is currently an Investor/Board Member of privately held companies BBN Technologies, Brightcove, Etsy, Facebook, Global Grind Digital, ModelN, and Prosper.com.

Jim is on the Strategic Investment Committee/Board of Accel-KKR, IDG-Accel China Fund, the Mail Room Fund (a joint venture with entertainment leader William Morris Agency), and Facebook Seed Fund.


BBN Technologies has received investment from In-Q-Tel, the VC IT arm of the CIA which is run by his former collegue at NVCA Gilman Louie.

www.iqt.org/technology-portfolio
BBN provides advanced solutions to a wide variety of government agencies and commercial customers including DARPA, Army Research Labs, Boeing, and Verizon Communications to name a few. BBN is headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The company is lead by CEO Robert G. (Tad) Elmer, and was awarded the IEEE Technical Innovation award for its contributions to computer networking in 1999. In-Q-Tel initially invested in BBN Technologies in March, 2004.

Now have a look at some of the companies owned by Accel Partners, its a pretty long list.

http://www.accel.com/company/sector.php?sector_view=124000

What would most of those companies be able to provide. A massive database of user information from a diverse pool across the internet and technology, cell phones, satellites etc.

Now some of the companies that In-Q-Tel have invested in. Takes some reading and surfing but there are a lot of similarities.

http://www.iqt.org/technology-portfolio/index-alphabetical.html

Common denominator.

Datamining.

But for who and why, this might help to explain what government intelligence agencies would like to be able to achieve, albeit under a different guise.

[ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_Awareness_Office"]Information Awareness Office - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia@@AMEPARAM@@/wiki/File:IAO-logo.png" class="image"><img alt="" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d1/IAO-logo.png/250px-IAO-logo.png"@@AMEPARAM@@commons/thumb/d/d1/IAO-logo.png/250px-IAO-logo.png[/ame]
The Information Awareness Office (IAO) was established by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the research and development agency of the United States Department of Defense, in January 2002 to bring together several DARPA projects focused on applying information technology to counter transnational threats to national security. The IAO mission was to "imagine, develop, apply, integrate, demonstrate and transition information technologies, components and prototype, closed-loop, information systems that will counter asymmetric threats by achieving total information awareness". Following public criticism that the development and deployment of these technologies could potentially lead to a mass surveillance system, the IAO was defunded by Congress in 2003, although several of the projects run under IAO have continued under different funding.

Since the IAO and the TIA program was disbanded due to public pressure and the removal of funding, some agencies have decided that this is an easier way to circumvent such intervention.
In-Q-Tel is supposedly not for profit, yet there is nothing stopping them from making a profit.

www.cia.gov/library
The CIA had to offer Silicon Valley something of value, a business model that the Valley understood; a model that provides those who joined hands with In-Q-Tel the opportunity to commercialize their innovations. In addition, In-Q-Tel’s partner companies would also gain another valuable asset, access to a set of very difficult CIA problems that could become market drivers.
To accomplish this, the Corporation will network extensively with those in industry, the venture capital community, academia, and any others who are at the forefront of IT innovation. Through the business relationships that it establishes, In-Q-Tel will create environments for collaboration, product demonstration, prototyping, and evaluation. From these activities will flow the IT solutions that the Agency seeks and, most importantly, the commercial opportunities for product development by its partners.
As an example, it can effect the full range of business transactions common to the industry -- it is venture enabled, can establish joint ventures, fund grants, sponsor open competitions, award sole source contracts, etc. And, because of the many degrees of freedom granted to it by the Agency, In-Q-Tel does not require Agency approval for the business deals it negotiates

nytimes.com
While In-Q-It will operate on a nonprofit basis, Mr. Louie said his intention was to invest in such a way as to make the organization self-sustaining.

In this case they are not reliant on government funding yet are still tied to the intelligence community via the CIA.

So In-Q-Tel, along with some help from associates and network partners (Accel Partners and James Breyer) invest heavily in companies and technologies that are beneficial to the intelligence community, the gathering of data and information from various sources, which due to the apathy of many users does not in effect create public concern over privacy.

So they have created a portfolio of businesses and technologies to help them compile a massive database.

What would be their next step if you were in their shoes.

The answer is pretty simple, they need to infiltrate or control the local privacy watchdog, which in this case is TRUSTe to limit any possible fallout that may arise from privacy advocates. How do they do this yet keep themselves at arms length, they use another company, in this case Accel Partners, to be the front.

In-Q-Tel are able to operate pretty much as the IAO would have without reliance on government funding or concern from the public over their civil rights being eroded.

Accel Partners are clean and have now in their own portfolio control of one of the largest privacy watchdogs on the internet which can only be of benefit to some of the other companies that are in their portfolio, among those being Facebook, RealNetworks, and others. .

Would TRUSTe take action against a company owned by the company that has just purchased them? :)

More about BBN Technologies which were mentioned earlier.

http://www.bbn.com/sitemap

On the board of directors at BBN Technologies we have Jim Breyer and Kevin Efrusy from Accel Partners and Dr Anita Jones.

http://www.iqt.org/about-iqt/our-team/board-of-trustees.html

Dr Anita Jones is also on the board of trustee's at In-Q-Tel.

So we have now shown a connection between the former CEO of In-Q-Tel, Gilman Louie and Jim Breyer of Accel Partners, now a connection between Jim Breyer and Kevin Efrusy of Accel Partners and Dr. Anita Jones who is on the board of Trustee's at In-Q-Tel and BBn Technologies with Breyer and Efrusy.

Are there any other connections?

Howard Cox, who is on the board at In-Q-Tel was also a chairman of the NVCA along with Gilman Louie and James Breyer.

http://www.iqt.org/about-iqt/our-team/board-of-trustees.html
Partner, Greylock Venture Capital; former Chairman of the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA); served in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

The CIA seem to have a vested interest in BBN Technologies.

http://www.iqt.org/technology-portfolio/bbn_technologies.html
BBN Technologies (BBN) is an advanced technology and research and development firm, providing services to government and industry. BBN is focused on solving some of the world’s most pressing problems. From information and infrastructure security, speech and language technologies, sensor and signal processing, to networking, BBN has been at the forefront of technological advances for over 50 years.
Founded in 1948, the name BBN’s name has become synonymous with technical innovation. Since providing the acoustical design of the UN General Assembly Hall, to implementing and operating the ARPANET, the forerunner of today’s Internet, BBN continues to pioneer first-of-a-kind technical achievements. From the first packet switch, the first router, and the first network email, which established the @ sign as an icon for the digital age, to today’s innovations such as building the world’s first wide-area quantum cryptography network, and advanced processing of foreign language, BBN scientists and engineers are pioneering innovations to help our customers work better and smarter.
BBN provides advanced solutions to a wide variety of government agencies and commercial customers including DARPA, Army Research Labs, Boeing, and Verizon Communications to name a few. BBN is headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The company is lead by CEO Robert G. (Tad) Elmer, and was awarded the IEEE Technical Innovation award for its contributions to computer networking in 1999. In-Q-Tel initially invested in BBN Technologies in March, 2004. For more information about BBN, please visit http://www.bbn.com.


www.masshightech.com
For almost 20 years, Heather Triplett Biehl has been an expert on bad guys. As an authority on counterterrorism, a former Middle East analyst for the CIA and a defense industry executive, she has briefed presidents, jumped out of helicopters and pitched technology to the country’s top intelligence agencies.

Biehl’s occasionally covert career continues with her latest post as the vice president of the flagship intelligence programs office at Cambridge-based BBN Technologies Inc.


inqtel.jpg

That should read NVCA not NVAC, whoops.

Is it all just coincidence?
Or have the CIA found a way to initiate the IAO without the publics knowledge?

Here is the PDF for Accelerating the Acquisition and Implementation of New Technologies for Intelligence:The Report of the Independent Panel on the Central Intelligence Agency In-Q-Tel Venture

We all know that the largest conspiracy site on the internet, ATS, uses TRUSTe to protect their members online privacy, now if that wasn't funny enough for you, it's also come to my attention that another forum that advertises itself as a safe haven for "sources" uses Facebook to advertise irtself. Open Minds Forum!

How any serious conspiracy theorists could possibly trust posting on either one of those sites after reading this deserves the attention that they might ultimately receive imho.


(This thread has been reposted under a different moniker after it was mysteriously deleted along with hundreds of other threads during the great meltdown of 09)

mojo.

(This article may be freely reproduced anywhere without attribution) :P

Comments

  • skunkskunk Regular
    edited February 2011
    This is another post from mojo.

    http://amkon.net/showthread.php/21879-The-CIA-linked-to-Internet-Privacy-Watchdog!?p=249469&viewfull=1#post249469
    mojo wrote:
    Muckety Maps are a godsend.

    First James Breyer, pretty much covered most of that.

    jamesbreyer.jpg

    http://www.muckety.com/8A67C0667ABCC3FBFDA5329CE287C714.map

    Dr Anita Jones, also covered these links.

    dranitajones.jpg

    http://www.muckety.com/3A7195A592C79A4C6A74C87A8962C78B.map

    Howard Cox, now it gets a little more interesting.

    howardcox.jpg

    http://www.muckety.com/2D0640CA0A4A14D40C590A811088377C.map

    And Gilman Louie. This strikes me as extremely strange that there aren't a lot more connections.

    gilmanlouie.jpg

    http://www.muckety.com/ECD28FC73B57795BE542A0A86226FE6D.map

    In-Q-Tel, next will be researching possible links between these and any possible associations with TRUSTe.

    In-Q-Tel.jpg

    http://www.muckety.com/2BAF8E67879B04A4AE8A0D2466ADD851.map

    CIA, now this is a tangled web and will take some sorting. Now notice the company Colgen LP, if you go to the Muckety link under the map and double click on Colgen you'll get this next map.

    CIA.jpg

    http://www.muckety.com/FA505EE7BF5EEC54881069E9DE030ADE.map

    Colgen LP, very militaristic/intelligence type connections wouldn't you say, and scattered in between we have Fox News, Discovery Channel, History Channel, National Public Radio and Pfizer. WTF!

    ColgenLP.jpg

    http://www.muckety.com/7368634432189560DE592A0B7EB71FC2.map

    The links at the bottom of each picture will take you to a saved version of the map at Muckety, double clicking on any of the icons with little crosses in the corner will expand the map to include their connections.

    Turned up some really interesting connections so far, just need to tidy up some loose ends before posting.
  • skunkskunk Regular
    edited February 2011
    A follow up post.





    This is what i found out about Colgen after a quick search.
    Colgen, LP is one of the latest and fastest growing defense consulting firms in the United States. Founded in 2003 by MG (Retired) Robert H. Scales Jr. PhD and Colonel (Retired) Jack H. Pryor, the company seeks to redefine how defense consulting is done today.
    We are a Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business (SDVOSB). Our company is structured virtually with the headquarters in San Antonio, Texas, and our associates and employees located throughout the country. The virtual office structure allows Colgen to deliver services of unparalleled quality very quickly and at very competitive prices.
    Our recent arrival on the defense consulting scene means that our consultants and associates are newly arrived as well. Their ideas are fresh. Their knowledge of defense related issues is current and well grounded in contemporary events.
    We deliver. Everyone who works for Colgen from the founders to the latest arrivals is committed to doing the work. Everyone contributes actively regardless of rank and time on station.
    We are careful to limit our work to what we know. Landpower and the Services that provide it; The Army, Marine Corps, Special Operations Forces, The Army National Guard, Army and Marine Corps Reserve, and other related landpower forces such as CIA direct action, homeland security and law enforcement. These are our sole point of focus and our only clients. In a remarkably short period we have gained a reputation within the Department of Defense for providing advice and perspective to senior executives on landpower issues both in government and the corporate world, as well as to Congress and the media.
    In summary, we are new, lean, well-connected and able to meet the needs of any client or individual who wants to work with or better understand our fighting men and women in the land Services.

    Clients of Colgen.
    Air War College National Security Agency
    Army Material Command Navy War College
    Army National Guard Northrop Grumman
    Boeing Pfizer
    Booze Allen Hamilton Raytheon
    Burdeshaw Associates LLC SAIC
    Canadian National War College Security Command
    Central Intelligence agency Special Operations Command
    CNOs Strategic Studies Group Sun Nutrition LLC
    Command & General Staff College The Wexford Group
    CSC University of Central Florida
    Discovery Channel University of Pennsylvania
    Fox News University of South Florida
    General Dynamics US Army
    History Channel US Army Artillery School
    Institute of Defense Analysis US Army Inteligence and Security Command
    Joint Forces Staff College US Army Reserve
    Lockheed Martin US Army War College
    Marine Corps University US Marine Corps
    Maxwell School, Syracuse University US Marine Corps Reserve
    National Defense University US Military Academy
    National Public Radio US Navy

    http://www.colgen.net/

    Where the fuck does the Fox connection fit into this company profile?
    Would they consult on Fox sending journalists into warzones maybe?




    Another follow up post


    In-Q-Tel are also a major investor in Call Miner.
    Eureka Essentials brings the power of speech analytics to small and medium sized single site contact centers. Eureka Essentials allows you to accurately search up to 1,000 hours per day of recorded audio, analyze acoustics, and categorize calls, all through easy to use web based applications.

    http://www.iqt.org/news-and-press/press-releases/2005/CallMiner_02-08-05.html
    CallMiner Inc., a leading provider of speech analytics software designed to uncover business intelligence from recorded calls, today announced it has signed a strategic investment and development agreement with In-Q-Tel, a private venture group funded by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). In-Q-Tel joins existing CallMiner investors Inflexion Partners, Intersouth Partners, and Village Ventures. Financial terms of the agreement are not disclosed but include enhancements to CallMiner's speech analytics toolset.


    *shudders*
  • skunkskunk Regular
    edited February 2011
    Another post



    Ok, so the links between in-q-tel and truste might be somewhat tenuous for some, relying mainly on gilman louie and james breyers connections and the connection through bbn tech and various directors.
    However this i think shows how keen In-q-Tel and the CIA are to be involved in Internet privacy and security.

    http://www.iqt.org/news-and-press/press-releases/2001/Safeweb_02-14-01.html
    SafeWeb, a leading Internet privacy technology company, announced that it has entered into a licensing agreement with In-Q-Tel, a private, non-profit corporation funded by the United States Central Intelligence Agency. Under this agreement, SafeWeb will utilize its PrivacyMatrix technology to create an Internet privacy and security product to protect confidential communications transmitted over the Web. The agreement was entered into on November 30, 2000.

    http://ca.sys-con.com/node/1001832
    Lucid Imagination, a commercial open source company dedicated to supporting Apache Lucene and Solr search technologies, today announced a strategic investment from In-Q-Tel (IQT), the independent strategic investment firm that identifies innovative technology solutions to support the mission of the CIA and the broader U.S. Intelligence Community. Through the IQT strategic investment, Lucid Imagination will support the United States Intelligence Community, made up of 18 organizations including the Central Intelligence Agency, by providing advanced access to Lucene and Solr search solutions.
    This partnership will further accelerate Lucid Imagination’s efforts towards facilitating and broadening the adoption of Lucene/Solr technology within the U.S. Intelligence Community, in addition to the commercial market. Lucid Imagination is proud to be a part of IQT’s efforts at bringing innovative technologies to the U.S. intelligence community.
    Lucene/Solr-based search has become one of the fastest-growing segments in the enterprise search market over the past three years, with more than 9,000 downloads per day and over 4,000 organizations using the open source software for some of industry’s most intensive search needs. Many organizations are replacing costly proprietary licensed search software products with Lucene and Solr because, in addition to lower TCO, it offers the most flexible and scalable architecture for developing highly sophisticated full-text search applications.

    http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/03.29.01/cover/cia2-0113.html
    A sprawling, San Diego-based research company, SAIC works on a staggering variety of projects. They've even helped design faster yachts for racing in the America's Cup. But In-Q-Tel is interested in a software package known as NetEraser, which protects Internet-connected computers against denial-of-service attacks, of the type that briefly crippled Yahoo!, Amazon.com, Excite and several other major sites early in 2000. While that security function is as useful for the CIA as it is for Yahoo!, NetEraser's other function is of greater use to the government's high-tech spies. NetEraser can disguise a computer's IP address, allowing agents to crack into foreign computers without leaving that telltale "cia.gov" address in the server's log. NetEraser both keeps unwanted visitors out of the CIA's computers and allows Agency spies to poke around in foreign computer systems undetected.
    Of course, CIA agents would not use NetEraser to infiltrate computers in the United States, because that would be illegal.

    http://www.iqt.org/technology-portfolio/srd.html
    SRD’s identity recognition software allows companies and government organizations to gain a greater than 360-degree view of individuals to better identify business opportunities and potential threats. SRD’s solutions are based on its proprietary identity recognition technology, which is the result of 20 years of research and development. Identity recognition extends insight beyond existing identity integration technologies by incorpo*rating non-obvious relationships and allowing organizations to share data anonymously while protecting privacy.
    SRD’s proprietary entity resolution process enables our solutions to go beyond the obvious of knowing who is who, to the non-obvious of knowing who knows who and who knows who anony*mously.




    Another post

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/jan/14/facebook
     
    The third board member of Facebook is Jim Breyer. He is a partner in the venture capital firm Accel Partners, who put $12.7m into Facebook in April 2005. On the board of such US giants as Wal-Mart and Marvel Entertainment, he is also a former chairman of the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA). Now these are the people who are really making things happen in America, because they invest in the new young talent, the Zuckerbergs and the like. Facebook's most recent round of funding was led by a company called Greylock Venture Capital, who put in the sum of $27.5m. One of Greylock's senior partners is called Howard Cox, another former chairman of the NVCA, who is also on the board of In-Q-Tel. What's In-Q-Tel? Well, believe it or not (and check out their website), this is the venture-capital wing of the CIA. After 9/11, the US intelligence community became so excited by the possibilities of new technology and the innovations being made in the private sector, that in 1999 they set up their own venture capital fund, In-Q-Tel, which "identifies and partners with companies developing cutting-edge technologies to help deliver these solutions to the Central Intelligence Agency and the broader US Intelligence Community (IC) to further their missions".
    The US defence department and the CIA love technology because it makes spying easier. "We need to find new ways to deter new adversaries," defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld said in 2003. "We need to make the leap into the information age, which is the critical foundation of our transformation efforts." In-Q-Tel's first chairman was Gilman Louie, who served on the board of the NVCA with Breyer. Another key figure in the In-Q-Tel team is Anita K Jones, former director of defence research and engineering for the US department of defence, and - with Breyer - board member of BBN Technologies. When she left the US department of defence, Senator Chuck Robb paid her the following tribute: "She brought the technology and operational military communities together to design detailed plans to sustain US dominance on the battlefield into the next century."
  • thewandererthewanderer Regular
    edited April 2011
    Taken from: Conspiracy!
  • skunkskunk Regular
    edited May 2011
    What does taken from mean, that this has been added to the cms? I thought this would be under fringe because its conspiratorial in nature, yet the fringe cms link doesn't work.

    http://www.totse.info/cms/articles/fringe

    Page not found
    The requested page could not be found.
  • thewandererthewanderer Regular
    edited May 2011
    skunk wrote: »
    What does taken from mean, that this has been added to the cms? I thought this would be under fringe because its conspiratorial in nature, yet the fringe cms link doesn't work.

    http://www.totse.info/cms/articles/fringe

    Page not found
    The requested page could not be found.

    This forum is a queue of articles to be moved to the CMS. After being published, I move it back to it's forum of origin and add a [Published] tag to it. "Taken from:" is posted so that I know where to move it back to.

    I'm not gonna lie, I completely forgot about this article being here. :facepalm: Adding now.

    As for broken links...that's dfg's department.
  • NIKOLASNIKOLAS New Arrival
    edited May 2011
    Now seriously ! ..do you expect me to read all the above and reply ????


    fuck!

    Authorities are nice, people are nice, Net is nice, nice being here:)
  • MiranMiran Semo-Regulars
    edited July 2011
    Considering they have a hard time keeping track of IRS records, I'm not too worried. After you deal with the DMV a few times, it becomes really obvious that the government as a whole doesn't really communicate very well with each other.

    Only time I could see a grand data-sniffer scheme being used effectively is in a pre-existing investigation of some sort. Pretty much the NSA's entire job these days is going through all the shit they gather and trying to figure out how much of it is actually worth anything.

    Not really the CIA's thing since the 80s.
  • edited July 2011
    :facepalm:
    A company that does business with a company that does business with the CIA doesn't like the first company with the CIA in any significant way.
    I ate at McDonalds last monday, I'm sure at least one CIA agent has also eaten at McDonalds, therefore I am linked to the CIA
    OP=Alex Jones, go masturbate to some jet contrails.
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