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Top Secret Intranet: How U.S. Intelligence Built Intelink - the World's Largest, Most Secure Network
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- ISBN-100130808989
- ISBN-13978-0130808981
- PublisherPrentice Hall Ptr
- Publication dateNovember 15, 1998
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions7 x 1.25 x 9.5 inches
- Print length380 pages
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Editorial Reviews
From Library Journal
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From the Back Cover
TOP SECRET INTRANET
How U.S. Intelligence Built INTELINK - The World's Largest, Most Secure Network
The never-before-published story of Intelink
An inside look at the U.S. Intelligence Community's worldwide, super-secure intranet
The U.S. Intelligence Community has built one awesome intranet. "Intelink" integrates and disseminates virtually every piece of information that goes into intelligence gathering, reporting, and analysis at the CIA, NSA, Defense Intelligence Agency, National Reconnaissance Office, FBI, and eight other top secret agencies to their "customers" - from the White House to the Warfighter. It's just about as secure as intranets can be. Now, for the first time, here's the inside story of how they did all that. Sure, there are a few things they can't tell you, but what they can tell you is utterly fascinating - especially if you've got your own intranet to build or manage.
* Building a maximum-security extranet to connect multiple independent organizations
* Implementation: what went smoothly - and what didn't
* Case studies: extending Intelink to new intelligence agencies and customers
* Security: encryption and access control issues
* U.S. Government network security efforts
* Cooperation with foreign governments
* Relevance to business covered in every chapter
* Future intranet tools
Someday your intranet will handle terabytes of data; Intelink is doing it right now. Discover how they've made their intranet secure, integrating HTML, SGML, XML, metadata, pull and push technologies, and collaboration tools to get exactly the right data to the right people at the right time. Then preview the U.S. Intelligence Community's revolutionary strategic plans for managing this information - and discover how you can use the same ideas to achieve competitive advantage. There's even a CD-ROM containing a demo of the actual Intelink interface, plus demo software, tools, metadata standards, training, and other information straight from Intelink. So put on your trenchcoat and dark glasses: you're going inside!
About the Author
FREDRICK THOMAS MARTIN began his career with the U.S. Intelligence Community in 1960 on the front lines as a linguist and intelligence analyst in the Middle East. He recently retired from the National Security Agency as a computer scientist and Deputy Director of their Information Services Group. He is currently a consultant to the Central Intelligence Agency working on implementing the future plans he discusses in this book.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
When your mission is protecting a nation's security, the term "mission-critical" takes on a whole new meaning!
In this extraordinary book, Fredrick Thomas Martin presents the never-before revealed secrets of Intelink, the world's largest and most secure information system the intranet/extranet of U.S. Intelligence Service. Perhaps the most surprising of those secrets is that this totally closed system is built onopen system standards: industry recommendations and International Standards like TCP/IP, SGML, and XML. Another secret is that Intelink is a cost-effective system, despite or perhaps because of its owners having an annual budget of 26 billion dollars. In one notable case, they achieved a cost savings of 90 percent in creating usable reports from raw intelligence, and reduced delivery time to one percent of what it had been.
Fredrick Martin is a superb guide to the present and future of highly secure information networks. As a NSA executive, he helped enhance Intelink, and is now helping the CIA move forward to the "Agile Intelligence Enterprise" of the future. Throughout this book, he shares his expert knowledge, with a focus on applying it to the needs of business systems like yours.
So, whether you want to:
- Apply U.S. Intelligence security techniques to your own computer systems
- Profit from the present and future information management strategies of the world's largest network; or simply
- Enjoy inside information, like the Walt Disney CIA connection or the secrets of steganography
you will want to read the first book ever to describe an on-going U.S. Intelligence operation Top Secret Intranet.
Charles F. Goldfarb
Saratoga, CA
August, 1998
Prologue
The many independent agencies that make up the U.S. Intelligence Community are being drawn strongly toward the concepts of an "Agile Enterprise." These concepts were born in the private sector, as companies sought ways to address increasing pressures to speed up internal operations and derive competitive advantages from their widely distributed expertise and institutional knowledge. The business imperatives were to be first-to-market with new products, to be faster in responding to customer requests, and to create solutions more tailored to each customer's needs, or simply to reduce costs. The U.S. Intelligence Community is feeling similar pressures today. Tight budgets since the end of the Cold War have created pressures to reduce costs, and the needs of intelligence "customers" are pushing the Intelligence Community to achieve greater speed, capacity, and flexibility than traditional practices allow. Under these conditions, an Agile Intelligence Enterprise is essential.
Greater speed in intelligence is demanded by the pace of world events and global information services. The end of bipolar diplomacy created a complicated national security environment for the United States and its allies. Diplomacy today is highly collaborative, and shaped by many different foreign perspectives and goals. The absence of an overarching military threat has left economic, military, and political agendas competing for attention. As governments continually adjust to new developments among these competing goals and agendas, the conduct of foreign affairs can shift. Those who formulate and implement foreign policy must continually reevaluate situations as new information arrives. And new information is arriving faster today. Global news and information sources have expanded markedly, and continue to evolve rapidly. For intelligence to be useful in this environment, it must be able to add something of unique value to the stream of external information reaching U.S. officials. In business parlance, the Intelligence Community is facing a need to operate with a "shorter cycle time," to exploit the more frequent but fleeting opportunities to make a "sale." The Agile Enterprise, with its collaborative work processes and shared information access, offers exactly what the Intelligence Community needs.
Capacity is a serious constraint in the processing and use of intelligence data. Technology for collecting and generating information has far outpaced the development of tools for exploiting information. The growth of openly available information, and the proliferation of sources for this information, are now familiar trends. We should expect these trends to continue in coming years, with some new twists likely to be provided by emerging services on the Internet, interactive radio and TV, and commercial satellites that bring near-real-time overhead imagery to the nightly news. The responsibility of the Intelligence Community to understand, integrate, and deconflict the disparate information coming to the U.S. Government can only be fulfilled if the capacity exists to handle the volume of relevant data, from both classified and unclassified sources. Capacity is an urgent issue, therefore, and is being made more so by the pressure for greater speed, described above, which requires more data to be exploited in less time. Moreover, intelligence consumers themselves are struggling to keep up with the information explosion, and therefore require individual customization of intelligence support. So, more data needs to be exploited in more customized products in less time. These conditions are driving intelligence toward the same "mass customization" that businesses derive from the Agile Enterprise.
Flexibility is a major issue for intelligence today. Many security threats demand sustained attention, but there are also urgent issues that arise and fade, international military and humanitarian operations that put U.S. soldiers at risk for a time, and developments in unstable areas of the world that suddenly command high level attention. Intelligence has to adjust to these shifting priorities without degrading its long-term efforts on the most serious threats to national security. The Intelligence Community is under pressure to reduce the cost of shifting priorities, and reduce the time it takes to ramp up to meet sudden customer needs. Readers will recognize in this intelligence challenge the same need for flexibility that led to concepts for an Agile Enterprise in the private sector.
The need for greater speed, capacity and flexibility is pulling each of the separate intelligence agencies toward greater use of on-line networks, more use of collaborative work processes, and more shared access to data all core elements of an Agile Enterprise even without any formal consensus to move in this direction together. In the pages that follow, Fredrick Thomas Martin provides a context and guidance for thinking about the additional breakthroughs that can be gained if the Intelligence Community pursues these concepts as a collective strategy.
Dr. Ruth A. David
Deputy Director for Science and Technology
Central Intelligence Agency
Langley, Virginia
August, 1998
Product details
- Publisher : Prentice Hall Ptr (November 15, 1998)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 380 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0130808989
- ISBN-13 : 978-0130808981
- Item Weight : 1.89 pounds
- Dimensions : 7 x 1.25 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,235,859 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #191 in Intranets & Extranets
- #906 in Political Leadership
- #2,195 in Privacy & Online Safety
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2013Very good book on the US intelligence community's INTELINK. Like most hard copy books and articles, it becomes dated, but nontheless it is a good base document on how INTELINK was first started.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2017Fun to read about a project that I worked on.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2015This book was ok, but the CD was missing in my copy.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2014Nothing new under the sun.....
- Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 1999Best reference of Intelink acronymns - for those who care.
Otherwise if you know what PKI, SGML and digital certificates are, this book is a bust. No discussion of impementation details. No discussion of firewalling, intrusion detection, encryption techniques (except to mention a few commonly known ones) or even VPNs.
Do they really use SSL and DES to protect our national secrets? That's scarier than a "dark and stormy night"!
Promises: "Security and Information techniques you can use right now" - no techniques here - just general discussion of common-sense principles
Promises: "Preview the future of intranets and extranets" - yeah right - from the newbies:
"AOL offers Internet access, updates on weather, email, news, sports, and stocks, multimedia entertainment, and their own search engine. Successful intranets like Intelink must have at their disposal a similar vast array of mission relevant tools" Page 160
Should Promise: "Interesting inside look at Gov. bureaucracy in action!"
Note: This book had to pass review by security agencies and this may be the reason it is so vapid.
Another Note: CD is somewhat interesting or I would have given this book a "0"
Top reviews from other countries
EMANUELLEUKReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 12, 20175.0 out of 5 stars GREAT BOOK. LOT AND LOT INFO AND FEATURE IN ...
GREAT BOOK.LOT AND LOT INFO AND FEATURE IN SIDE.