ON THE NET...
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i43/43a01801.htm
Note: The following text is a quote:
---
http://www.internet-haganah.com/harchives/005658.html
03 July 2006
Human Trails In Cyberspace
Social scientists create maps of online interactions:
By JEFFREY R. YOUNG - Philadelphia - If the Internet is a new kind of social space, what does it look like?
That's a question of particular interest to social scientists eager to see what cyberspace might reveal about the nature of human behavior.
Researchers, after all, have long sought to map social groupings and interactions in the physical world. Now, with so much activity on computer networks, scientists can collect vast amounts of hard data on human behavior. Each blog points to other blogs in ways that reveal patterns of influence. Online chats can be tallied and parsed. Even the act of clicking on links can leave trails of activity like footprints in the sand.
"We're entering the golden age of social science," says Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project. "We know more than we ever did about what's on people's minds."
While all that data could seem overwhelming, researchers are refining ways to visualize Internet activity. If a picture is worth 1,000 words, a visualization may well be worth 10,000 data points.
At a conference this month at the University of Pennsylvania called "The Hyperlinked Society," a panel of academic and industry experts showed off their Internet maps and talked about the challenges of painting meaningful pictures of cyberspace.
CONTINUE...
Posted on 03 July 2006 @ 08:00
Note: The following text is a quote:
---
http://osint.internet-haganah.com/archives/000373.html
NYPD names new counter-terrorism chief
Associated Press, THE JERUSALEM POST - Jun. 27, 2006:
A former deputy homeland security adviser to President George W. Bush has been named counterterrorism chief for the New York Police Department, officials said.
Richard Falkenrath, who served at the White House until May 2004 before becoming a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, "brings outstanding and impressive academic credentials to this important post," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said in a statement Monday.
Falkenrath will spearhead the police department's aggressive strategy for protecting the city, which Kelly says remains atop terrorists' list of potential targets.
Posted on 03 July 2006 @ 12:43 GMT