Monthly Archive for June, 2011

Getting to Know the Neighbourhood

In a previous article I wrote about social media as the new neighbourhood that must be navigated and interrogated to gather information. This article deals with part of the learning process you will need to undergo to understand this neighbourhood.

RSS Feeds

To keep abreast of topics that interest you, in this case things you normally investigate, you will first need to set-up Google Reader to gather background information.  Using Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds will give you a summary of recent content and headlines. To find useful RSS feeds, use the RSS Search Engine and search by topic.

Google News

Create a complex query to narrow the results. Once ther query starts tp provide useful results click on the RSS button at the bottom of the page and copy the URL of the page. Go to Google Reader and add this URL as a subscription.

Google Blog Search

Do the same as the above for Blog searches.

In the next article in this series I will deal with tracking Wikipedia.

Asymmetric Warfare & Business Continuity

In a previous article, I wrote about a system that created a single point of failure. In a strategic sense, computers and IT as a whole have become a single point of failure in both government and industry.

Chinese military leaders call automation the great equalizer, since its enemies heavily depend upon computers. An effective attack upon their enemy’s IT infrastructure provides an immediate and disproportionate impact which is the core concept of asymmetric warfare.

This asymmetry benefits the attacker, regardless of his motives or methods.

CPIC Not Updated in a Timely Fashion

The most recent Auditor-General report reveals some problems at the RCMP that I have suspected for years. Auditor-General reports going back to 2000 have criticized the CPIC system (see 7.86) regarding timely delivery of criminal record data.

The problem we encounter most often is the backlog of criminal records that has seen the updating of some records taking 3 years.

The Auditor-General estimates that the RCMP takes an average of 14 months to update an English criminal record in CPIC. The French updates take an average of 36 months. The stated goal is updating a record in 24 hours. Unfortunately, reality is an average time of 334 working days (see 5.60).

At some point this is going to result in tragedy. Even more unfortunate, is the fact that the RCMP and the government is judgment-proof for this negligent behaviour. The investigation company used by employers and  their insurance companies aren’t as lucky. Even if a claim is rejected by the courts, the legal expenses may destroy the company for reporting in good faith what was on CPIC.

How will this play out when a sex offender is hired to work with vulnerable people. What will happen when that same offender follows his natural instincts and victimizes someone.

It is also conceivable that this situation will also thicken our border with the U.S.A. as  their authorities start to act upon their distrust of CPIC. Frequent border-crossers, such as truck drivers, will be subjected to additional delays. If that extends to airports we can expect more security searches, questioning, and delays.

The problems we see with CPIC should be a warning about all supposedly trusted and sole source systems. All such systems break-down!

When we are forced to trust one system, especially a critical system, and that system fails, we are all vulnerable. It doesn’t matter it is health care or CPIC, without reliable alternatives, people will be hurt.

The U.S. National Academies

The U.S. National Academies (e.g., National Academy of Science, National Academy of Engineering) made their publications available for free on-line.

This is a very reputable source of reference material of a very wide range of subjects. The publications cover a broad range of topics from Agriculture, to Engineering and Technology, to Conflict and Security Issues, and much more.  The documents may be read on screen, downloaded as a PDF if you register.

The New Neighbourhood

In the past, most investigations included ‘neighbourhood inquires’ where neighbours were questioned regarding the subject’s activities and lifestyle.

We still do neighbourhood inquiries, but over the last three decades this has produced less and less information of value, to the point that we now consider this an extraordinarily expensive investigative process.

Neighbours rarely share derogatory information or observations about the subject, and fewer still, even know the subject as most urban neighbourhoods are too transient and social contact is minimal.

Today’s neighbourhood isn’t tied to geography, but rather by Internet connectivity. The advent of virtual media has created virtual neighbourhoods that the Investigator must be adept at navigating and interrogating.

This new neighbourhood may reveal inappropriate pictures, drug and alcohol abuse, bad-mouthing of employers, co-workers, clients, and organisations. It may reveal poor communication skills and much worse – much of which is found exclusively online.

Unfortunately, inexpert interrogation and navigation of this neighbourhood has caused issues.

The ubiquity of Internet search engines and a lack of training and guidelines may put the Investigator in contravention of some laws if the resulting information creates a record of personally identifying information that is subsequently mishandled. Possession of Internet search results may impose either declared or implied responsibilities regarding the handling of the data in some jurisdictions.

A casual and undisciplined approach to Internet and social media searching raises questions regarding the competence, handling, fairness, storage, and analysis of the data. The role of the Investigator doing the searching should be clear from the outset. The sources and methods employed should also be clear throughout the search process and its reporting.

Virtual Identities

The subjects of an investigation do not line-up to tell the Investigator all his or her screen names and their related email addresses.

The Investigator must find the screen names and related email addresses from what he already knows at the beginning of the Investigation to build an online profile of the subject.

The Investigator must also recognise that screen names are often used by more than one person or a screen name may be used maliciously.

As the old New Yorker cartoon said, “On the Internet, nobody knows you are a dog”.

Navigation & Interrogation

The unstructured nature of data available on the Internet, and its density, creates problems for the searcher.

Google may say it found three million hits, but it will only show one thousand. The results will change depending on which version of Google searched and whence it is searched.

When searching for information about a person or company, the Investigator shouldn’t get bogged-down by search engine hits, but rather go straight to databases that have the right category of data for his purposes. This may mean searching sources not indexed by the search engines.

Google isn’t a substitute for knowledge and experience.