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New Algorithm Could Help Predict Future ISIS Attacks (thestack.com) 120

An anonymous reader writes: Researchers have developed a new algorithm which may help law enforcement agencies predict potential terror attacks. The computer model has a particular focus on the behavioral patterns associated with Islamic State (ISIS) supporters...
For eight months in 2015, the researchers tracked 108,086 individual followers on ISIS-related social media pages, noting that sudden increases in the number of pages "preceded the onset of violence in a way that would not have been detected by looking at social media references to ISIS alone." According to The Stack, the University of Miami team "used a mathematical equation typically applied in physics and chemistry to monitor the development and growth of pro-ISIS groups. 'It was like watching crystals forming. We were able to see how people were materializing around certain social groups; they were discussing and sharing information -- all in real-time... This removes the guess work. With that road map, law enforcement can better navigate what is going on, who is doing what, while state security agencies can better monitor what might be developing,..."
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New Algorithm Could Help Predict Future ISIS Attacks

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  • Algorithm? (Score:5, Funny)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Saturday June 18, 2016 @04:30PM (#52344511) Homepage Journal
    Surely they mean "deep learning" and "AI" and "neural network"? Don't these people know how to generate hype? Algorithms are so 1990.
    • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Saturday June 18, 2016 @05:01PM (#52344639)
      You need al-Gorithms and al-Gebra to catch al-Quaeda. Everyone knows that.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    So now that ISIS know the alogrithm exists, assuming some of them read news, then all they need to poison it is to suddenly browse as if they were trying to target something at the antipodes of their real target.
  • New Algorithm Could Help Predict Future ISIS Attacks

    How about a new policy that could help prevent future ISIS attacks?

    Does a temporary ban on immigration from conflict areas still seem unreasonable?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Does a temporary ban on immigration from conflict areas still seem unreasonable?

      Yes. It is far more reasonable to stop financing the conflict. But market dominance in the arms trade takes precedence. The immigration charade is a diversion.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Total fatalities due to terrorism in the USA (1995-2014): 3264 [umd.edu]

      Total fatalities due to gun violence (2001-2013): 406,496 (source CDC)
      Total fatalities due to automobiles (2001-2013): 501,462 [wikipedia.org]

      So we really need to ban cars and guns?!

      • That gun violence number includes suicides which is misleading. For instance, from the 2013 CDC data table 18, it gives firearms deaths at 33,636. The number of suicide by firearms is 21,175. Almost two thirds of those fatalities are intentionally self inflicted by people harming only themselves (which as a free person should be your right even if it is stupid).

        12,461 people did die from gun violence in 2013 though. However, 48,545 died from poisoning deaths and only 6,637 of those were suicide. That is 4

    • Now how's that going to make anyone money? How do you want to justify spending billions on security theater and smokescreens if the people are not properly scared?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      How about a new policy that could help prevent future ISIS attacks?

      Does a temporary ban on immigration from conflict areas still seem unreasonable?

      Let's see...since 2010...

      February 18, 2010: Austin suicide attack: Andrew Joseph Stack III flying his single engine plane flew into the Austin Texas IRS building killing himself and one IRS employee and injuring 13 others. Stack left a suicide note online, comparing the IRS to Big Brother from the novel 1984.

      Wouldn't help.

      March 4, 2010: 2010 Pentagon shooting: John Patrick Bedell shot and wounded two Pentagon police officers at a security checkpoint in the Pentagon station of the Washington Metro rapid tran

    • "Does a temporary ban on immigration from conflict areas still seem unreasonable?"

      Because discriminating against people who have detailed on social media their intention to kill us for religious reasons would be racist.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      New Algorithm Could Help Predict Future ISIS Attacks

      How about a new policy that could help prevent future ISIS attacks?

      Does a temporary ban on immigration from conflict areas still seem unreasonable?

      Wouldn't have made much of a difference in Orlando.....

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Or anywhere else. Muslims are already here. The war has started. Young females are the first casualties in this war. How long will England allow for its citizens to be raped and murdered by an invading force?

        It is your country. Until you stop defending it. Then your country belongs to someone else.

        Blood has been spilled by both sides. There is no peace with people who believe in an invisible man in the sky who has told them they alone rule this world.

        http://www.nationalreview.com/article/386648/rotherhams-a

    • by Z80a ( 971949 )

      Another simple solution is to well, have fucking men inside ISIS, you know, the ol good spy work, that thing NSA should actually do.

      • You likely cannot do that.

        ISIS often sends recruits who do not show some extreme value to their death by either fighting on the front lines or by suicide bombings. So in order to get someone on the inside (as opposed to turning someone already on the inside) they would either have to take up arms against our allies, commit a terrorist attack, or somehow help with the planning and organization of either in a way that makes them more valuable to keep around than put at risk.

        What they need to do is work people

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        NSA started as signals intelligence and that is its primary focus today. The human intelligence work is CIA.

        And just how will the U.S. infiltrate spies into Daesh? They are not unlike a motorcycle gang or the Mafia. To get in, one has to make one's bones. So you expect the U.S. to tell its agents it is okay to knock off a few heads to gain access? Once you figure out how to clear the Geneva conventions on this, get back to us.

        Okay, so maybe you want lower level access, not big shot access. Daesh's best use

  • by Anonymous Coward

    n/t

  • this sounds very much like "Project Insight" from Captain America Winter Soldier, and also the film "Minority Report". we know how those worked out - people got murdered or jailed for just being alive...

  • Do they have a proof for this algorithm or is it all smoke and mirrors like Theranos?
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      As they only predict potential attacks, whatever they predict will be correct, no matter how meaningless.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    if (it is a muslim) then probability of attack *= 10000
  • by retroworks ( 652802 ) on Saturday June 18, 2016 @05:17PM (#52344709) Homepage Journal

    Don't you miss the days of the big attacks? 9/11, Timothy McVeigh in Oklahoma, embassy bombings?

    If the definition of "effective policy" is "terror doesn't make the news" then there can be no effective policy. Because whatever happens, however small, if it's the biggest outrage of the year, becomes the news cycle.

    The number of deaths from violence, as a percentage of human deaths, goes down every century. We now mourn ten year wars whose total casualty counts for military are less than a single week in World War 1 or II. The press is trying to define "policy failure" as "something bad happened", and whatever the worst thing happens floats above the fold. The Orlando shootings were by a rather odorous loser that women don't like, who was obsessed about filming his first person shooter rampage on his smartphone. There's no indication of any potential by the guy to ever do anything as bad as Timothy McVeigh. But there will always be kids shooting 9 people in a church or something, and the papers will always lead with that story. It's the same trend that lends to "micro-aggression" at colleges, so many real threats have been solved that we need to "drill down" to have something to be concerned about.

    • Few people have the patients and planning capabilities to pull off what McVeigh did. It's relatively easy to go buy a gun and shoot people; making a moving truck full of home-made explosives takes time, effort, and real planning. It takes awhile to produce 5,000 pounds of explosives.
    • by swb ( 14022 )

      It's almost like there's this human capacity to worry that can't be turned off.

      I remember in college becoming worried about a class -- an upcoming test, a paper due, something like that -- and thinking, oh, if I could just get that taken care of, I'd have nothing to worry about.

      As soon as I did, something else to worry about cropped up.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    These algorithms never work. I'm pretty shocked how often bullshit announcements like this keep popping up. Now I'm just waiting for AI to be cheapened into some bullshit SJW propaganda project.

  • ...and now ISIS operatives will curtail their social media activity in response to this.

    Great way to push ISIS communications underground where it'll be more difficult for alphabet soup agencies to analyze...
  • by suss ( 158993 )

    Is it going to be more or less effective than TSA searches?
    If i remember correctly, they failed to find potentially dangerous objects in 92% of test cases...

  • Mass surveillance will start working for terrorism now! It really will this time!
    Just forget about all the possible abuses. You should trust us with your freedom!

  • After all, it was only a matter of time to name it after the guy who invented the internet, Al Gore.

  • Here it is: Any place and any time there will be a potential terrorist attack. Oh, you want real predictions? Funny, this magic algorithm cannot deliver those either.

  • To me it seems these algorithms could be also used for monitoring (and later suppressing) the forming of ANY other political movement, too .... It is becoming more and more important that there are limits of what might be considered a"terrorist movement"! (Ofcourse, ISIS is one, but what about an unwanted political movement, e.g. in Turkey, Germany or Spain...)
  • Since 1971 OPEC is being bullied to sell Oil exclusively in US dollars resulting in friction between 1.8 billion Muslims Worldwide and The West;
    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/... [bloomberg.com]
    http://qz.com/562128/isil-is-a... [qz.com]
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
    http://www.zerohedge.com/print... [zerohedge.com]

  • More propaganda, now trying to catch everyone who knows even a tiny bit about computers. Remember, if you're not a gun shootin', Bud drinkin', Jeezus worshippin', red-blooded 'MURICAN, the terrorists win.
  • First of all, "terrorism" accounts for a vanishingly small percentage of deaths. We could and should completely ignore the issue with little or no ill effect. That would be my assessment if I were in charge, but I'm not. So instead here's my assessment of the "terror algorithm" idea...

    Here's the problem. We will find patterns in the noise because humans are genetically programmed to find patterns in anything and everything. We will use the patterns we find to "predict" things that already happened, and we w

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