NY Times
 
 
The Pentagon as Silicon Valley’s  Incubator
 
By _SOMINI  SENGUPTA_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/somini_sengupta/index.html)
 
Published: August 22, 2013 

 
SAN FRANCISCO — In the ranks of technology incubator  programs, there is 
AngelPad here in San Francisco and Y Combinator about 40  miles south in 
Mountain View. And then there is the Pentagon. 
 
In the last year, former Department of Defense and  intelligence agency 
operatives have headed to Silicon Valley to create  technology start-ups 
specializing in tools aimed at thwarting online threats.  Frequent reports of 
cyberattacks have expanded the demand for security tools, in  both the public 
and private sectors, and venture capital money has followed. In  2012, more 
than $1 billion in venture financing poured into security start-ups,  more 
than double the amount in 2010, according to the National Venture Capital  
Association.  
For years, the Pentagon has knocked on Silicon  Valley’s door in search of 
programmers to work on its spying technologies. But  these days, it’s the 
Pentagon that is being scouted for expertise. Entrepreneurs  and venture 
capitalists are finding it valuable to have an insider’s perspective  on the 
national security apparatus when trying to find or prevent computer  
vulnerabilities or mine large troves of data.  
“They have unique insights because they’ve been on the  front line,” said 
Matthew Howard, a former intelligence analyst in the Navy and  now a 
managing partner at Norwest Venture Partners, referring to former military  and 
intelligence operatives who have hatched start-ups. He has invested in  several 
such companies. “Now they’ve got commercial desires. The lines are  
blurring.”  
One of the start-ups is _Synack_ (https://www.synack.com/) , which promises 
to vet an army of  hackers to hunt for security vulnerabilities in the 
computer systems of  government agencies and private companies. The company’s 
co-founders, Jay Kaplan  and Mark Kuhr, met in Fort Meade, Md., in the 
counterterrorism division of the  National Security Agency. They left the 
agency in 
February after four years  there, and later decamped to Silicon Valley. 
Within weeks, they had raised $1.5  million in seed money; they are now working 
with their first customers and  pitching their experience in the spy 
agency.  
“Doing things on a classified level really opens your  eyes,” Mr. Kaplan 
said. “The government is doing a lot of interesting things  they don’t 
disclose. You have a unique perspective on what the adversary is  doing and the 
state of computer security at a whole other level.”  
_Morta_ (http://mortasecurity.com/)  _Security, _ 
(http://mortasecurity.com/) another of the start-ups, was  founded by Raj Shah, 
a former F-16 fighter 
pilot for the Air Force in Iraq. He  described himself as “a policy adviser”
 to the N.S.A. before moving to Silicon  Valley to establish the company 
this year with two former analysts. Morta’s work  is in such “stealth mode,” 
in valley parlance, that the company has said nothing  about what it is 
working on. Nor would Mr. Shah describe fully what his two  co-founders were 
doing at the agency before they formed the company.  
“There are very sophisticated threats that are able to  steal data from 
corporations and government,” is all Mr. Shah would say. “Our  guys’ 
background — they just have a deeper understanding of that problem.”  
Though Silicon Valley sees itself as an industry far  removed from the 
Beltway, the two power centers have had a _longstanding_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/technology/silicon-valley-and-spy-agency-bound-by-strengthening-w
eb.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0)   symbiotic relationship. And some say the 
cozy personal connections of  ex-intelligence operatives to the military 
could invite abuse, like the  divulging of private information to former 
colleagues in the agencies.  
“They have enormous opportunities to cash in on their  Washington 
experience, sometimes in ways that fund further innovation and other  times in 
ways 
that might be very troubling to many people,” said Marc Rotenberg,  executive 
director at the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington.  “Both 
sides like to maintain a myth of distant relations. The ties have been in  
place for a long time.”  
The ties are more than personal; the National Security  Agency is among the 
few organizations in the world, along with companies like  Facebook and 
Google, with a cadre of engineers trained in mining big data.  
By working at the N.S.A., “you get to be on the  bleeding edge, not just 
the cutting edge of what’s possible,” said Oren  Falkowitz, who left the 
agency last year to start Sqrrl, a big data analytics  company based on 
technology developed at the agency. Mr. Falkowitz has since  left Sqrrl, which 
is in 
Boston, and is considering moving to Northern California  to start working 
with a big data company.  
Last year, Sumit Agarwal left his post as a deputy  assistant secretary of 
defense to join _Shape Security, _ (http://www.shapesecurity.com/) a 
Mountain View company  that offers what it calls “military grade” security 
solutions against botnets,  groups of infected computers used for attacks.
 
Shape Security’s chief executive is Derek Smith, a  former Pentagon 
consultant whose last company, Oakley Networks, which  specialized in detecting 
insider threats, was sold to Raytheon, the military  contractor, in 2007. Since 
its inception in 2011, Shape Security has raised $26  million in venture 
financing. 
 
Computer security experts are leaving other parts of  government for 
start-ups, too. _Sameer  Bhalotra, who worked on cybersecurity issues at the 
White 
House, _ 
(http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/21/former-white-house-cybersecurity-official-joins-start-up/)
 was  recruited by a Redwood City-based 
security company called Impermium. And _Shawn Henry, _ 
(http://www.crowdstrike.com/about-us/index.html) a former  computer security 
specialist from the 
F.B.I., left his job in government last  year to help establish CrowdStrike, a 
computer security firm.  
In Israel, government security workers have long found  a career path in 
moving to start-ups, said Peter Wagner, a partner at a recently  opened 
venture firm, Wing Venture Partners, in Menlo Park. Many Israeli  entrepreneurs 
come out of the Israeli military and intelligence services, he  pointed out.  
“It’s not surprising that some of the same type of  experience is finding 
its way into entrepreneurial endeavors here in the U.S.,”  Mr. Wagner said.  
The idea for Synack came to its founders, Mr. Kuhr,  29, and Mr. Kaplan, 
27, when they were working side by side at the N.S.A.’s  computer network 
operations division; within the agency, that includes figuring  out how to 
attack or exploit data gathered from a computer network. Nights and  weekends, 
they hatched their business plan. They proposed to assemble an army of  vetted 
bounty hunters from around the world to find security bugs. Their product  
is a variation of the so-called bug bounty programs run by large companies, 
like  Facebook and Microsoft, that in effect invite security researchers to 
try to  crack vulnerabilities in their systems — and reward them if they do. 
 
Part of their pitch to potential customers is that  they will vet the 
bounty hunters before setting them loose. They hope to sign up  government 
agencies as customers, along with private firms, especially in the  software 
services sector.  
“We are able to provide security experts previously  inaccessible to 
companies,” Mr. Kaplan added.  
Both men’s college educations were paid for by N.S.A.  scholarships — Mr. 
Kaplan at George Washington University, Mr. Kuhr at West  Point Military 
Academy and then at Auburn University. With that came an  obligation to work at 
the agency, which they did, each for four years.  
“We really liked our jobs there,” Mr. Kuhr said.  
Then they headed west, drawn by the same dream of  riches that draws so 
many other people here.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to