(Oct. 2010) DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) has some creepy tentacles: the Information Awareness Office (IAO); TIA (Total Information Awareness, renamed Terrorism Information Program); and TIPS (Terrorism Information and Prevention System).
By 2003, an irate American people forced the government to drop these spooky command-and-control police state operations -- or did they?
In 2002, Divya Narendra had an idea for a social network site.
By the fall of 2003, she and twin brothers Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss were looking for a web developer who could bring their idea to life.
On Nov. 30, 2003 they hired Mark Zuckerberg to finish their program's codes. Little did they know what a monster Zuckerberg would hatch.
Zuckerberg bragged about taking their moneyso he could make his own social networking site. He boasted that his creation, which became the popular "Facebook" online social network, would naturally succeed. While pretending to work on college projects, he was sabotaging his clients by stalling.
He claimed he was backed by the "Brazilian Mafia" -- but it is dangerous to believe anything Zuckerberg says.
Notably, The Social Network, is a new movie based on Zuckerberg and the pre-CIA founding years of Facebook, starring Jesse Eisenberg as Zuckerberg.
But as bad as the beginning of Facebook is, the parallels between the CIA's backing of Google's dream of becoming "the mind of God," and the CIA's funding of Facebook's goal of knowing everything about everybody are spookier.
Congress stopped the IAO from gathering as much information as possible about everyone in a centralized nexus for easy spying by the United States government, including internet activity, credit card purchase histories, airline ticket purchases, car rentals, medical records, educational transcripts, driver's licenses, utility bills, tax returns, and all other available data.
The government's plan was to emulate Communist East Germany’s STASI police state by getting mailmen, boy scouts, teachers, students and others to spy on everyone else. Children would be urged to spy on parents.
Facebook, however, does what no dictator ever dreamed of -- it has a half billion people willingly doing a form of spy work on all their friends, family, neighbors, etc. -- while enthusiastically revealing information on themselves.
The huge database on these half a billion members (and non-members who are written about) is too much power for any private entity.
But what if it is part of, or is accessed by, the military-industrial-national security-police state complex?
We all know that "he who pays the piper, calls the tune," therefore, whoever controls the purse strings controls the whole project.
When it had less than a million or so participants, Facebook demonstrated the potential to do even more than IAO, TIA and TIPS combined.
Facebook really exploded after its second round of funding—$12.7 million from the 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 front established by the CIA in 1999.
In-Q-Tel is the same outfit that funds Google and other technological powerhouses. One of its specialties is "data mining technologies."
Dr. Anita Jones, who joined the firm, also came from Gilman Louie and served on In-Q-Tel’s board. She had been director of Defense Research and Engineering for the U.S. Department of Defense. This link goes full circle because she was also an adviser to the secretary of defense, overseeing DARPA, which is responsible for high-tech, high-end development.
Furthermore, the CIA uses a Facebook group to recruit staff for its National Clandestine Service.
*** Ralph Forbes is a a free-lance writer who lives in Arkansas.Email him at at rforbes@centurytel.net.
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED
http://www.americanfreepress.net/html/socialmedia105010.html
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