Posted on 03/23/2014 9:38:22 AM PDT by markomalley
It takes more than a little tradecraft to spin off a startup from the National Security Agency.
Chris Lynch, an investor with Atlas Venture, knows this firsthand. Two years ago, he spent weeks trying to sign a deal with nervous NSA programmers who not only were sworn to secrecy but were barred from carrying cell phones at work. There were furtive Skype conversations and parking-lot phone calls that would end after strange clicks.
Eventually, $2 million in seed money was enough to lure five programmers from the NSA. These days theyre working at Sqrrl, a company in Cambridge, Massachusetts, thats selling a commercial version of the database behind some of the spy agencys most controversial eavesdropping programs.
These guys were government hacks working in a cave, and in a highly structured environment, says Lynch. Kind of the opposite of an entrepreneur.
A blistering public debate surrounds the NSAs secret eavesdropping programs (see Spying Is Bad for Business). But whats less well known is that the agency actively patents inventions and contributes to open-source projects, and that its employees occasionallyso far, very occasionallyemerge from secrecy to create spinoff companies.
More than 4,000 programmers work at the NSA, in addition to 960 PhDs and some 1,000 mathematicians known internally as the math mafia. Like other federal agencies, the NSA is compelled by law to try to commercialize its R&D. It employs patent attorneys and has a marketing department that is now trying to license inventions like tamper-proof bags, secure manhole covers, and a dispersion system to make sure shredded documents cant be pieced back together. One startup, Integrata, based in Maryland, exclusively licensed a patent on how to detect intruders on wireless networks.
Revelations about the extent of NSA spying have only increased demand for just the sorts of technology the agency excels at. And at least one NSA offshoot is developing products expressly to defeat the agencys snooping.
We believe government surveillance has gone too far and individuals have lost their right to privacy, says Will Ackerly, who spent eight years building software for the NSA before founding Virtru, a Washington, D.C., company selling a secure file-sharing system that he says could defeat mass surveillance. Ackerly says he took another seven NSA engineers and contractors with himabout half the staff at his startup.
The NSA is one of 16 U.S. government organizations devoted to intelligence gathering (among them, only the CIA is larger). It has a budget of $10.5 billion a year, of which about $500 million is spent on more basic R&D in programming, optics, microelectronics, and quantum computing. The agency claims more than 170 patents, and it is even said to have invented the audiocassette.
But the NSA has faced severe challenges trying to keep up with rapidly changing technology. Back in 1999, a new director, Michael Hayden, began efforts to shed aging spies after scathing reports that the agency was stuck in the Telex age. It had failed to predict an Indian nuclear test and couldnt intercept North Korean signals because they were sent along fiber-optic cables, not over the air.
Most recently, the NSAs revamp included a sweeping effort to dismantle hundreds of single-purpose databases, or stovepipes, and switch to flexible cloud computing, where data is spread across thousands of servers. In fact, in 2008, NSA brass ordered the agencys computer and information sciences research organization to create a version of the system Google uses to store its index of the Web and the raw images of Google Earth.
That team was led by Adam Fuchs, now Sqrrls chief technology officer. Its twist on big data was to add cell-level security, a way of requiring a passcode for each data point in a spreadsheet. At the NSA, thats how software (like the infamous PRISM application) knows what can be shown only to people with top-secret clearance. Similar features could control access to data about U.S. citizens. A lot of the technology we put [in] is to protect rights, says Fuchs.
Like other big-data projects, the NSA teams system, called Accumulo, was built on top of open-source code because you dont want to have to replicate everything yourself, says Fuchs. But participating in the open-source community wasnt easy. When it came up with improvements, Fuchss group had to find a third party to suggest a change without mentioning the NSA. Thats why the NSA eventually decided to open-source Accumulo as well. Even though the move presented risks (coders names would be known, and they could become targets of foreign surveillance), the NSA concluded that it would benefit if a wider community of software programmers worked on Accumulo.
In 2011, the NSA released 200,000 lines of code to the Apache Foundation. When Atlas Ventures Lynch read about that, he jumpedhere was a technology already developed, proven to work on tens of terabytes of data, and with security features sorely needed by heavily regulated health-care and banking customers. When Fuchss NSA team got cold feet about leaving, says Lynch, I said Either you do it, or Ill find five kids from MIT to do it and theyll steal your thunder.
Eventually, Fuchs and several others left the NSA, and now their company is part of a land grab in big data, where several companies, like Splunk, Palantir, and Cloudera, have quickly become worth a billion dollars or more.
Over the summer, when debate broke out over NSA surveillance of Americans and others, Sqrrl tried to keep a low profile. But since then, it has found that its connection to the $10-billion-a-year spy agency is a boost, says Ely Kahn, Sqrrls head of business development and a cofounder. Large companies want enterprise-scale technology. They want the same technology the NSA has, he says.
The Sqrrl team is working 16-hour days. Fuchs says the pace is far more intense than it was at his old government job. But there are things he misses. His top-secret security clearance is on hold, and hes no longer part of the mission to protect the country. For the researchers and developers inside the NSA, its hard to empathize with whoever leaves, says Fuchs. Theres no system inside the NSA to leave and start companies. We wanted to maintain contacts, but its been a challenge.
That said, the jobs and industry is exported, much of it to China.
We are nearing 18 trillion dollars in debt. Yet we import almost everything.
America needs to keep jobs right here in America, if America is to benefit from things like this.
This probably has been going on for at least a few years.
Below is an example of probable gear developed possibly by former NSAERS.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3136170/posts
Police Keep Quiet About Cell-Tracking Technology
Associated Press ^ | Saturday, March 22, 2014 | Jack Gillum
Posted by Star Traveler
WASHINGTON (AP) Police across the country may be intercepting phone calls or text messages to find suspects using a technology tool known as Stingray. But theyre refusing to turn over details about its use or heavily censoring files when they do.
Police say Stingray, a suitcase-size device that pretends its a cell tower, is useful for catching criminals, but thats about all theyll say.
For example, they wont disclose details about contracts with the devices manufacturer, Harris Corp., insisting they are protecting both police tactics and commercial secrets. The secrecy - at times imposed by nondisclosure agreements signed by police - is pitting obligations under private contracts against government transparency laws.
Many newspapers still publishing often have a listing of criminals being arrested each day or a weekly total.
It is amazing how many of the arrested criminals got stopped for a vehicle safety violation or a moving violation. After stopping the vehicle/driver, the police find a lot of illegal drugs in the vehicle or weapons.
When one thinks about all the vehicles on the road, one has to wonder how the cops did the needle in the haystack event to find a driver with a car loaded with illegal drugs and or weapons. No wonder, we seldom see any vehicle pulled over by the local LEOs for excessive speed or reckless/endangering driving.
I invented a dispersion system quite some time ago. It involved dispersing the molecules of the documents into the atmosphere via a combustion process. Very effective.
Fire bad!
Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping!
To get onto The Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping List you must threaten to report me to the Mods if I don't add you to the list...
I love Dug
The government tries to commercialize most everything....that’s how all those NACA/NASA spin offs came about
They have the time to listen to me asking hubby to pick up a loaf of bread on the way home but after I tracked down the idiot at HP computers who stole my cc# and ran up a boatload of iTune$, they couldn’t find the time to arrest him.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.