Feral Jundi

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Technology: Social Networking Technology, The War, and Security Contractors

Filed under: Technology — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:57 PM

 

     Ok, this is a plea to the powers that be.  If civilian contractors are the second largest force that is assisting in this war with 133,196 (2007 CENTCOM Census) +/- contractors out there, why do we not have access to a network?  This TIGR system, or basically Myspace for the military is an awesome idea.  But it completely ignores the input from thousands of us security contractors overseas that actually have some good intel on the various areas.

     Or if we cannot be involved with TIGR, then set up a separate system for us?  It makes sense to me, and in many ways, we all are communicating on various forms of social networks.  Forums for one, has been a huge deal for uniting contractors and passing down information. But forums are also poorly organized.  Myspace and Facebook are popular too, but yet again, they are not organized to suite the main goal of enhancing the war effort.  Nor are these outlets necessarily secure.  So really, OPSEC and PERSEC is left to the whims of those posters or the moderators of forums.  

     I say an easy solution to all of this, is to create a secure TIGR type system for contractors, that could be monitored by someone in the proposed Advisory Corps that John Nagl proposed.  Or just find a relevant office, in the sea of departments in the DOD or DOS that could babysit something like this.  

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Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Year In Review: 2018 Google Analytics Report For Feral Jundi

Filed under: Year In Review — Tags: , , — Matt @ 1:02 AM

 

Another great year and part of the FJ tradition is to take a look back and reflect. Google Analytics has been an excellent tool and it helps me with my Kaizen plan for the blog.

As of this writing, I am still working as a security contractor and have done so since 2004. I have seen a lot of contracting since then and folks like myself are rare. Most contractors only do this stuff for a couple of years, and then they are gone. As for myself, I am still in the game, still healthy, and still driving forward. This blog is a part of that journey, and what a journey that has been…

Now for the big question… With such low numbers for the blog, is it worth maintaining? Absolutely. This is a record of an entire era of contracting. It has value, and I continue to come back to it for reference. I know others have as well, so in short, the blog has value and it is not going anywhere.

In past reviews, I have already mentioned the migration of conversation over to social media. I treat my Facebook Page more like a blog, and it is way faster and more connective than a website like this. But where the blog shines is when I come up with some really unique perspective or content that is not getting out there, and then I can make a record of it and share it. So that is how I use the blog nowadays and will continue using it as such.

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Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Law Enforcement: As Police Budgets Are Cut, PSC Usage And Volunteer Watch Groups Increase

With the economic slowdown pushing municipal budgets to the brink, police layoffs and rising crime levels have been a common story in the hardest-hit American cities. Survey results from more than 700 police departments, released in April, showed that 21 percent had layoffs in the past two years. Another 56 percent shrank as a result of employee attrition.

This was an excellent article and if you follow the link below, you will see all of the links/sources that supports this thing. The one link that I will add from it, is for that quote up top. That is a lot of unemployed police officers, and like with the Marine story, this industry will see more interest from this group. You will also see these officers starting up companies or joining companies locally to provide services, much like what the article described below. Check it out. –Matt

 

As Police Budgets are Cut, Citizens Step In
By STEVE YODER
August 7, 2012
Dabney Lawless, 38, took it personally when criminals targeted her neighborhood in east Oakland with a rash of burglaries. It was December 2010, and due to the city’s budget shortfall, Oakland — a city with the California’s highest violent-crime rate — had just laid off more than 10 percent of its cops.
So Lawless started going door to door, recruiting neighbors to revive a dormant neighborhood watch group. The group, of which she’s a block captain, decided to do more than patrol the streets. Last year more than a hundred of them chipped in about $250 each to hire a private security company to cruise through the neighborhood in a patrol car. Lawless says that investment, plus neighbors using the watch group to keep each other informed about suspicious behavior, has already made the neighborhood feel safer, and though she doesn’t have the data to support it, she’s certain the number of burglaries has dropped dramatically.

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Saturday, May 19, 2012

Legal News: Security Contractor Philip Young Is Back Home After 2 1/2 Years In Afghan Prison

Filed under: Afghanistan,Legal News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 11:04 AM

Fantastic news, and this is the final chapter of this horrible episode that Philip Young and his family suffered. And the effort to get Philip released was awesome. From the grass roots campaign of getting the word out through social networks, to the constant legal pressure by governments and legal counsel.

Specifically I would like to mention the good work of folks like Elena Fon who tirelessly worked this issue, along with so many others, all using social networks, letter writing, petitions and blogs. The Young family, and friends of Philip worked very hard using these tools, and all together, I think the campaign for raising awareness worked very well.

I also want to thank Kimberley Motley for her steadfast work and dedication towards getting Philip released. She has tirelessly dedicated herself to the cause of justice in Afghanistan and she is awesome.

What is equally important to note is that this was a green on blue incident, that involved a fight to the death between a contractor and an Afghan. It is not the only incident like this that has involved contractors, but what makes it important to note is that Phil won this battle and lived. Unfortunately, there have been far too many of these types of incidents in the last couple of years where contractors and military folks have been killed, and it is sobering to think about.

My only suggestion is to keep in mind what General Mattis once famously said to his Marines. “Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everybody you meet.” This statement is as true for the military as it is for contractors, and that is the reality of this war. –Matt

 

Kimberley at Pul-e-Charkhi prison, working with Phil on his case.

South African security contractor Philip Young arrives at Cape Town International Airport after spending time in a Afghan jail for shooting someone. Young's children, David (22), Dylan (18) and Caitlin (13) were waiting for him at the airport. Picture: Henk Kruger

SA man’s hell in Afghan jail
May 18 2012
By Daneel Knoetze

The threat of execution, al-Qaeda and Taliban members baying for his blood and a Guantanamo Bay-style lockdown. That’s what a Cape Town man endured in an Afghanistan jail for two-and-a-half years.
On arriving at Cape Town International Airport on Thursday, Philip Young spoke of the hardships he went through while held captive by authorities in Afghanistan.
Young was speaking moments after an emotional reunion with his children: David, 22, Dylan, 18, and Caitlin, 13. They hadn’t seen their father for almost three years. When she saw him Caitlin burst into tears.
“It feels great to be home. It was a long ordeal, but now it’s time to get on with my life,” said Young.
Before Young stepped off the plane David said: “It’s been very difficult to be without our dad for so long. I’ve missed the ordinary things – having a beer with him, going cycling, going camping. I can’t wait to do those things again.”
In 2010 Young was found guilty of murder in an Afghan court and sentenced to five years in prison. The sentence was increased to 16 years after the prosecutor tried to secure the death sentence through an appeal. Later it was reduced to seven years.

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Technology: Palantir

Filed under: Technology — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 3:58 PM

These deals have turned the company into one of the quietest success stories in Silicon Valley—it’s on track to hit $250 million in sales this year—and a candidate for an initial public offering. Palantir has been used to find suspects in a case involving the murder of a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement special agent, and to uncover bombing networks in Syria, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. “It’s like plugging into the Matrix,” says a Special Forces member stationed in Afghanistan who requested anonymity out of security concerns. “The first time I saw it, I was like, ‘Holy crap. Holy crap. Holy crap.’ ”

Thanks to Paul for enlightening me about Palantir. This is some very cool technology and I thought I would share this with the rest of the readership. This thing is also drawing a lot of interest from many sectors, and not just government.

What I like about it is it’s ability to process all of this data that is floating around out there.  Or process data that groups have compiled, and help them to make sense of it all or find problems/deficiencies.

What I thought was interesting about the company itself, is it’s influences and how it innovates. The name Palantir comes from the movie Lord of the Rings, and the crystal ball used in the movie was called a Palantir. So this is a technology company with a ‘middle-earth’ theme. lol

But the other cool thing is how they find talent.  Here is a quote:

Palantir has been doubling headcount every year to keep up with business. To get a job at the company, an applicant must pass a gauntlet of brain teasers. An example: You have 25 horses and can race them in heats of 5. You know the order the horses finished in, but not their times. How many heats are necessary to find the fastest? First and second? First, second, and third? (Answers: six, seven, and seven.) If candidates are able to prove themselves as what Karp calls “a software artist,” they’re hired. The company gives new arrivals some reading material, including a guide to improvisational acting, a lecture by the entrepreneur Steve Blank on Silicon Valley’s secret history with the military, and the book The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11. They’re also rewarded with a low wage by Silicon Valley standards: Palantir caps salaries at $127,000.

Improvisational acting?  lol Now I am intrigued by that, and would be curious as to why this is a needed skill. Could it be that improvisational acting is a ‘building snowmobiles’ activity, where a person has to be creative on the fly?  A test of a person’s OODA and their ability to react off of another person?

Well, definitely check this one out. I also think this would be a fantastic investment if it ever became an IPO. –Matt

 

 

Palantir, the War on Terror’s Secret Weapon
November 22, 2011
A Silicon Valley startup that collates threats has quietly become indispensable to the U.S. intelligence community
By Ashlee Vance and Brad Stone
In October, a foreign national named Mike Fikri purchased a one-way plane ticket from Cairo to Miami, where he rented a condo. Over the previous few weeks, he’d made a number of large withdrawals from a Russian bank account and placed repeated calls to a few people in Syria. More recently, he rented a truck, drove to Orlando, and visited Walt Disney World by himself. As numerous security videos indicate, he did not frolic at the happiest place on earth. He spent his day taking pictures of crowded plazas and gate areas.

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