According to a report in IT (and whatever else it turns it's emmense brainpower pool towards) news The Register (at title indicated above) says that the Department of Homeland Security has decided to cancel a big data mining program called ADVISE citing privacy concerns.
The program was suspended last spring when real personal data was found to have been used in testing instead of dummy data. DHS now says it will not be restarted most likely because of the findings of a June report on the program.
The Register's analyst says the program is like many private ones that mine data for credit cards and other services which are often flawed, and come to false conclusions, themselves.
And data mining might be dead as done by an in house program for the DHS, but a spokesman eerily drops the bomb that there are many private programs that could be picked up. (Hmmm if the GOP's Voter Vault wasn't getting their data from ADVISE then they must have one of those private programs that could be used. Lets keep an eye out as to who gets that contract.)
Data Mining is Not Dead. (It's just one multi million dollar program ordered up by the DHS that's been dumped.)
I recommend you don't miss The Register's mini analysis of government run like a business within this report either. Luckily, there is no registration or subscription required at the site for reading.
It also might be good to remember that this same not exactly competent DHS is in charge of FEMA, which we might all need some day. Nah, it'll probably be better for your heart if you forget about it and hope that day never comes.
tags: data mining tia dhs
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