Mining For Terroists, But Sometimes Finding Innocents

Saturday, March 24, 2012


Credit: Jupiter Images
           
            In the age of global terrorism, countries around the world are always preparing for, and thwarting, the next attack.  To accomplish the job of protecting society, law enforcement and intelligence agencies have developed ways to identify, track, and stop those who would commit terrorist acts. 
            One of the new systems for identifying potential terrorists, Dark Web Project, was developed by a team of researchers at the University of Tucson (J. Laudon & Laudon, 2012).  The Dark Web Project combs the Internet looking for communications with keywords that would suggest an individual is a potential terrorist threat (DW-TV, 2008).  With this information, the program creates a visual plot that is as unique as a human fingerprint, allowing investigators to track the movement of suspects as they move throughout the Internet (DW-TV, 2008).
            But programs such as this can also ensnare innocent individuals.  German sociology professor Andrej Holm is just one such individual (J. Laudon & Laudon, 2012).  Holm served 3 weeks in solitary confinement in a German jail, and was under 24 hour surveillance after a portion of his work was used by a terrorist group who claimed responsibility for the burning of police vehicles (DW-TV, 2008). 
            Unlike humans, computers cannot yet reason and therefore are prone to creating, and insinuating to investigators, connections that create situations such as Holm’s.  Cases such as Holm’s, and the development of software to search for potential terrorist, leave society in a delicate position to balance the need for security, and the right to privacy.


References
DW-TV (Producer), & DW-TV (Director). (2008). Online surveillance software / data mining. [Video/DVD] DW-TV / WYBE.
Laudon, J., & Laudon, K. (2012). Management information systems (12th ed.). New York, NY: Prentice Hall.

How the NBA "Works" Worldwide With Akamai

Credit: Akamai.com

The worldwide appeal of the NBA has led to a need for content availability on a global scale.  With more than 40,000 servers positioned worldwide, Akamai is uniquely positioned to accomplish the goal of worldwide distribution for the NBA.  
The worldwide desire for NBA content has led to the development of multiple content distribution steams to satisfy the global desire for games and information.  Akamai helps the NBA distribute content via RSS feeds, live HD quality video streaming to the web, widgets, and support for fantasy leagues (J. Laudon & Laudon, 2012).  Once the NBA creates the content, Akamai servers mirror it, storing it on their servers spread throughout the world waiting for local server users to demand the content (Akamai, 2012).  Once a local user requests media from NBA.com, Akamai servers take over and distribute the content to the user (J. Laudon & Laudon, 2012)
            With the speed and reliability that Akamai provides, the NBA has reached exponential growth in visitors to the site, some 35 million unique visitors per month (Akamai, 2012).  With a close working relationship between the NBA and Akamai, new technologies and increased deployment of content have made NBA.com a powerful force in online content (Akamai, 2012)

References
Akamai. (2012). NBA. Retrieved March/24, 2012, from http://www.akamai.com/html/customers/testimonials/nba.html
Laudon, J., & Laudon, K. (2012). Management information systems (12th ed.). New York, NY: Prentice Hall.
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