How has the mentality changed in the IC regarding OSINT according to Umphress? Why do analysts and decision makers have a hard time believing OSINT is a valuable collection discipline?

OSINT – week 4 Discussion Forum

 

For this forum, you are to answer one of the questions listed below.  The original post must be a minimum of 250 words.  Additionally, you must post 2 peer reviews on a classmate’s original post.  Responses should be a minimum of 200 words each and include direct questions.

 

Questions:
How has the mentality changed in the IC regarding OSINT according to Umphress?

Why do analysts and decision makers have a hard time believing OSINT is a valuable collection discipline?

 

 

Student Response #1 

How has the mentality changed in the IC regarding OSINT according to Umphress?

 

Because of the internet, governments do not decide whether or not they will release information to the public, they only now decide what information will be released.  Because of the massive growth of the internet, Umphress points out that “. . . the internet has such a popular following, it is a good candidate for OSINT, the discipline of acquiring open-source information for the purpose of answering a specific question” (Umphress, 2005, 84).

 

Information from the internet is delivered in a manner that computers can process.  As a result, the capabilities to scan, isolate, and collect useful data with the intent of processing it into intelligence has increased dramatically.  In the age prior to the internet, books, manuals and newspapers were scanned manually by a person, limiting the amount, and therefore, the general quality and impact of OSINT as a legitimate source.

 

For that reason, OSINT has historically not been held in nearly as high esteem as it is now, and there is still room to grow.  In that regard, Umphress cites Mercado in his article.  Mercado says that “Collecting intelligence these days is at times less a matter of stealing through dark alleys in a foreign land. . . than one of surfing the Internet under the fluorescent lights of an office cubicle to find some open source.  The world is changing with the advance of commerce and technology. . . Mouse clicks. . . are more useful than stylish cloaks and shiny daggers. . .” (Mercado, 2004, np).  With the growing volume of useful intelligence derived from OSINT, the opinion as to the usefulness and validity of the art has grown as well.

 

Resources

Mercado, Stephen. Sailing the Sea of OSINT in the Information Age. 2004. Studies in Intelligence 48, no. 3.

Umphress, David. Diving the Digital Dumpster. 2005. Retrieved from https://edge.apus.edu/access/content/group/security-and-global-studies-common/Intelligence%20Studies/INTL%20422/Content/Week%204/Diving%20the%20Digital%20Dumpster_%20The%20Impact%20of%