Hi Anna, >I'm currently doing a lot of reading and thinking >around the development of data mining capacities >for the US intelligence community especially >in operations such as Able Danger and the 'lead-up' >to the Iraq invasion (so late '90s). And how this >then sets up the corporate possibilities which we >start to see emerge with the post-dot com rejig >of the web via amazon, google etc.
It' a pretty large research project. Are there any thoughts/ideas on what this type of research will bring about, as in what it may teach us before sept 2001? marc Thanks for that Mark! That post is actually in progress - I'm hoping to turn it into a 3 way piece with the other two members of that blog - Andrew Murphie and Xavier Fijac over the next few weeks. I'm currently doing a lot of reading and thinking around the development of data mining capacities for the US intelligence community especially in operations such as Able Danger and the 'lead-up' to the Iraq invasion (so late '90s). And how this then sets up the corporate possibilities which we start to see emerge with the post-dot com rejig of the web via amazon, google etc. If anyone has good pointers on stuff to look at around this (ie beyond alll the congress reports by intelligence agencies etc which I'm already wading through), I'd really appreciate it. Anyone doing critical work on this stuff etc. btw enjoying Jeremy! cheers Anna On 13/09/2008, at 1:46 AM, marc garrett wrote: > > Hi all. > > > > JuSt thought that I'd highlight something that I came across > > recently by > > Anna Munster on the Dynamic Media site called 'data nonvisualisation'. > > > > http://researchhub.cofa.unsw.edu.au/ccap/2008/08/19/data-nonvisualisation/ > > > > definitely worth a read... > > > > marc > > _______________________________________________ > > NetBehaviour mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour > > Dr.Anna Munster Senior Lecturer School of Art History and Theory College of Fine Arts UNSW P.O. Box 259 Paddington NSW 2021 612 9385 0741 (tel) 612 9385 0615(fax) [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ NetBehaviour mailing list [email protected] http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
