Thursday, October 11, 2007

'Dark Web' Project Takes On Cyber-Terrorism

here are currently over a billion Internet users in the world, but not all of them are friendly.

In recent years, the anonymous nature of the Web has turned it into a boomtown for all sorts of radicalized hate.

"Since the events of 9/11, terrorist presence online has multiplied tenfold," says Hsinchun Chen, director of the University of Arizona's Artificial Intelligence Lab. "Around the year 2000, there were 70 to 80 core terrorist sites online; now there are at least 7000 to 8000."

Those sites are doing everything from spreading militant propaganda to offering insurgency advice to plotting the next wave of attacks, making the net, as Chen also points out: "arguably the most powerful tool for spreading extremist violence around the world."

But thanks to Chen, that tide may be turning. He's the architect behind the newest weapon in the war on terror — a giant, searchable database on extremists known as Dark Web.

Using a bevy of advanced technologies, Dark Web is an attempt to uncover, cross-reference, catalogue and analyze all online terrorist-generated content.

This is a vast amount of material, posted in dozens of languages and often hidden behind the blandest of portals.

The more radical of these forums can host as many as 20,000 members and half a million postings, making the Web an increasing nightmare for the intelligence community, but a perfect prowling ground for a data-mining expert like Chen.

In fact, Dark Web is Chen's second foray into online crime-fighting. The first began in 1997, when he — already an expert at tracking social change online (crime and terrorisms being extreme examples of social change) — teamed up with the Tucson Police Department and the National Science Foundation (NSF) to help develop Coplink, a way for law enforcement forces around the country to link files and consolidate data.

It was Coplink that helped build the case against the Washington, D.C., Beltway snipers, John Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo. Because of this and other successes, in early 2002 the NSF asked Chen to try to build a similar system against terrorism.

He began with a modified version of Web-spidering. Typically, Web spiders are keyword-based followers of the hyperlinks between Web pages. This is essentially how search engines like Google and Yahoo do their work.

Unfortunately, a study done by the NEC Research Institute, the research arm of Japan's consumer-electronics giant NEC Corporation, found that existing engines cannot keep up with the Web's growth rate. Each one can only mine 16 percent of the available material.

The recent arrival of meta-search engines, capable of triangulating between several engines at once with a much higher success rate, solved this problem, but unearthed another.

"Information analysis was our goal," says Chen, "and information overload was the biggest hurdle."

To clear this hurdle, Dark Web relies on all sorts of analytical tools. It utilizes existing technologies such as statistical analysis, cluster analysis, content analysis and link analysis, as well as brand new technologies like sentiment analysis, which is capable of scanning documents for emotionally charged keywords such as "that sucks."

This form of analysis has proven effective in gauging the success of new consumer products. But instead of judging the fate of the latest movie, Chen uses sentiment analysis to look for emotions like rage and hate in an attempt to tease apart the social activists from the suicide bombers.

That's merely the beginning. Dark Web also employs social-network analysis to map extremist networks, determining the importance of each member and establishing the organizations' hierarchies.

To do this, Chen uses centrality and structural-equivalence measures to examine social-network components, such as the prestige allotted to any given poster by other members and the "closeness" — a given poster's access to information on the network coupled with his independence from others — among subjects in an attempt to further separate an organization's leaders from its outliers.

Researchers then explore things such as cohesiveness and group density — using a form of pattern analysis called blockmodeling — to help determine the stability of any given organization and, perhaps more importantly, the nodes most vulnerable to attack.

These methods were already in use before Dark Web. Chen and his cohorts also developed a few novel ideas of their own, including a technique called Writeprint which examines structural and semiotic content from anonymous postings in an attempt to determine authorship.

"The Web is a gargantuan series of diffused networks," says NSF spokesman Dana Cruikshank. "Dark Web finds the patterns that make it much less decentralized."

Chen says that if Dark Web had been online before the Iraq war, it could have determined whether the purported links between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein were fact or fiction.

Moreover, the database also offers a terrorism knowledge portal, essentially a search engine for extremism, and a terrorism expert finder, a database of the world's best anti-terrorism minds — two things that have been sorely missing in the war against extremism.

Despite all of this tantalizing potential, not everyone is convinced Dark Web is actually a tool for freedom.

Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, an online civil-liberties group, says "the very same tools that can be used to track terrorists can also be used to track political opponents."

To make sure that doesn't happen, Rotenberg maintains that Dark Web must be used within the confines of our existing privacy laws — an idea that may be better in theory than in practice.

Though Chen strenuously denies it, there are a number of similarities between Dark Web and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's controversial Total Information Awareness (TIA) initiative, for which funding was cut off by Congress in 2003 over civil-liberties concerns.

"Just because someone posts something we don't like on the Internet, doesn't mean they also suspend their First Amendment rights," says Mike German, the ACLU's policy counsel on national security, immigration and privacy. "Things like authorship analysis are particularly tricky. How could you know that someone was really intent on violence before that act of violence was committed?"

German, who spent years on the domestic-terrorism beat for the FBI before coming to work for the ACLU, feels that Dark Web is a great waste of critical resources.

"I know this from my time spent undercover, infiltrating exactly these kinds of organizations: Every terrorist training manual makes it clear that a huge separation should be kept between the bomb-makers and the propagandists. Between the action wing and the political wing. This means, by design, Dark Web is chasing the wrong people."

Chen disagrees.

"By design, we really only look into the contents of the propagandists of the jihadist movement," he says. "I think this is the bigger danger — the ability of the Web to attract and 'infect' young disgruntled men in the world.

"We do not get into the actual operational wings of their groups, as most of the secret operational communications are encrypted and moved off-line," Chen explains. "Tracking those secret member communications is the domain of NSA, not us."

Civil-liberties concerns may continue to dog the technological front of the war on terror, but Dark Web is already producing results.

A recent study by Chen's group of training manuals and methods to build and use improvised explosive devices posted online — including where in the world such manuals have been downloaded — has led to countermeasures that are currently keeping soldiers and civilians alike safer. Which is, after all, the point.

from

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,300956,00.html

Battle against terrorism in Fata is lost, US Congress told

By Anwar Iqbal

WASHINGTON, Oct 10: The US pressure on President Pervez Musharraf to do more in the war against terror has been counter-productive and the battle against extremists in the tribal areas has been lost, a key congressional panel was told on Wednesday.

Witnesses appearing before the House Armed Services Committee also noted that the United States has been publicly involved in arranging a power-sharing deal in Pakistan, which may hurt its image if the arrangement fails.

“I’m concerned that our policy toward Pakistan has not been as comprehensive as it should be,” said the committee’s chairman, Congressman Ike Skelton. “We may be unprepared to handle the repercussions if events in Pakistan continue to move as rapidly as they have in recent years.”

The powerful committee, which oversees US military policies, invited a host of witnesses to speak on “security challenges involving Pakistan and policy implications for the US Department of Defence.”

“We’ve put additional pressure on President Musharraf,” Dr Marvin Weinbaum of Washington’s Middle East institute told the committee. “Let me suggest, however, that increasingly this pressure has been counter-productive.”

He said that the actions President Musharraf took under pressure had not only fallen short “but have had the double-barrelled effect of intensifying opposition within the frontier region and also eroding his political support in the country.”

Mr Weinbaum, a veteran South Asian scholar who has authored several books on Pakistan, warned: “Most of us who look at Pakistan believe at this point in time (believe) that Pakistan has in the northwest frontier area lost the battle against extremism and terrorism.

“And the consequences … are quite considerable for the United States, for our success in dealing with the insurgency in Afghanistan, stabilizing that country, and of course uprooting the Al Qaeda network and the spread of Islamic extremism in Pakistan,” he said.

“And … the consequences … for Pakistan, its stability, its integrity are really tied up with what happens in that tribal region.”

Congressman Duncan Hunter, the ranking Republican member of the committee, however, noted that Pakistan is committed to the war against terror, has deployed nearly 100,000 troops in the tribal belt, some of them coming off the Indian border, and hundreds of Pakistani troops also have died while fighting the terrorists.

But “there’s been information that I’ve seen to the effect that most of that corps resides in garrison and is not undertaking what one might call aggressive operations,” he added.

Teresita Schaffer, a former US ambassador and now director of the South Asia programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, told the committee that in the past six months, President Musharraf has been seriously weakened.

And “the major non-religious political figures, in my view, have been diminished; and the US has been publicly involved in the deal-making leading to Pakistan’s next government,” she observed.

“I expect that Musharraf’s election last weekend will eventually be confirmed by the Supreme Court and that legislative elections will be held in January,” she added.

Ambassador Schaffer warned that the government that follows these elections is likely to be an uneasy one. “Musharraf will be one power centre. He believes in unity of command … and is not particularly interested in power-sharing. Both his political party and perhaps the army will be strongly tempted to manipulate the elections to minimise Ms Bhutto’s claim on power,” she said.

“If Bhutto does participate in government, she will strongly defend her turf. And assuming that Musharraf retires from the army, that institution will be under new leadership and will be a distinct power centre, no matter how careful Musharraf has been to promote officers loyal to himself,” she said.

from
http://www.dawn.com/2007/10/11/top5.htm

Belly dancers in a tribe of their own

Thursday, October 11, 2007

When Maria Hamer's sister took up belly dancing, Ms. Hamer wasn't interested in joining her.

"I was a punk rock chick. I thought it was kind of hootchy-kootchy," said Ms. Hamer, 31, of Bellevue.

Now, Ms. Hamer, her sister and three other dancers in a troupe called Zafira have been named Troupe of the Year 2007 in the annual Golden Belly Awards.

The awards are given by a magazine called Zaghareet, a Middle Eastern arts and culture publication. Another Pittsburgh group, Khafif Music and Dance, won the Best Kept Secret Award.

The members of Zafira include Ms. Hamer; her sister, Christine Andrews, of the South Side; Olivia Kissel, of Highland Park; and Ms. Hamer's other sister, Jen Imashev, of Neville Island, who performs periodically. Tamara Nelson lives in Santa Cruz, Calif., but is still involved with the group.

"We call her our honorary member because she lives so far away. But she performs with us when she can and through her, we have been able to book events in California," Ms. Hamer said.

Ms. Hamer started dancing in the early '90s after she learned that her sister's teacher had a tribal influence to her dancing, combining, as the troupe's Web site describes, "contemporary and ethnic dance that blurs the boundary between old and new."

"I started dancing and really got into it," Ms. Hamer said. "I was kind of like this tribal goddess from another planet. I drew facial tattoos and everything."

Ms. Kissel got involved after she met Mrs. Andrews.

"I thought it would be like 'I dream of Jeannie' when I first heard of belly dancing," Ms. Kissel said, but Christine said, 'No, it is much different.' I really trusted her, so I gave it a try."

When the women decided to dance as a group around 1996, they initially belonged to a troupe called Ghawazee. They formed their own troupe, Zafira, and began doing performances in 2000.

"Zafira means victorious," Ms. Hamer said.

Now, the troupe is so busy that it is booked all but one weekend through the end of the year.

Members of Zafira and Khafif belong to the Society for Creative Anachronism Inc., an international organization that preserves and re-creates life in pre-17th century Europe.

"They wear clothing of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance era and our dancing fits right in," Ms. Hamer said of the society.

Her husband, Angus Douglass, is a fighter in a medieval group in the society.

Ms. Kissel and Ms. Hamer teach belly dancing, and Ms. Kissel also has started performing with her 16-year-old daughter, Fawn, who attends the High School for Creative and Performing Arts and won an award through Scholastic Books for an article she wrote about belly dancing. Ms. Hamer has a 3-year-old son, Kai Douglass.

The troupe just returned from performing last weekend in Arizona, and Ms. Hamer and Ms. Kissel are planning an event called Fusion on Saturday.

"It is a daylong event with dance workshops and then an evening performance," Ms. Hamer said.

Both women describe their belly dancing as still maintaining the "tribal" influence.

"We love dancing together," Ms. Hamer said. "For us, it is less about being sexy and performing but more about enjoying the company of other dancers and dancing with them."

For more information about Zafira and its events, visit www.zafiradance.com.

First published on October 11, 2007 at 8:51 am
Kathleen Ganster is a freelance writer.
from
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07284/824470-57.stm