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To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (92309)8/23/2005 6:30:20 PM
From: scion  Respond to of 122087
 
In-Q-Tel, CIA's Venture Arm, Invests in Secrets

By Terence O'Hara
Monday, August 15, 2005; D01
washingtonpost.com
washingtonpost.com

When inventors James MacIntyre and David Scherer founded Visual Sciences Inc. in 2000, doing work for the Central Intelligence Agency was not in their plans.

The two men had developed software that could monitor and graphically display patterns in complex information systems. A bank marketing executive using the software could determine which online customers were clicking on links to information about home equity loans, then display information about those customers.

It takes no great leap of imagination to envision a CIA analyst using the software, connected into the right databases, to track terrorist activities. But it took In-Q-Tel to make that leap.

The nonprofit organization, funded with about $37 million a year from the CIA, last year made a small investment in Visual Sciences and paid the McLean company a fee to license its software to the intelligence agency. For Visual Sciences, which has 50 commercial customers and has been profitable for two years, it was a way into the federal sector without the bureaucratic hassles required to compete for contracts.

"In-Q-Tel provided a buffer from being a real government contractor," MacIntyre said. "I still don't know how our technology will apply to the CIA."

In the five years since it began active operations as the "venture capital arm" of the CIA, In-Q-Tel's reach and activities have become vast for so small an operation. It has invested in more than 75 companies and delivered more than 100 technologies to the CIA, most of which otherwise would never have been considered by the intelligence agency. Virtually any U.S. entrepreneur, inventor or research scientist working on ways to analyze data has probably received a phone call from In-Q-Tel or at least been Googled by its staff of technology-watchers.

Born from the CIA's recognition that it wasn't able to acquire all the technology it needed from its own labs and think tanks, In-Q-Tel was engineered with a bundle of contradictions built in. It is independent of the CIA, yet answers wholly to it. It is a nonprofit, yet its employees can profit, sometimes handsomely, from its work. It functions in public, but its products are strictly secret.

Over the years, some critics have dismissed In-Q-Tel as a government boondoggle. They have described the firms it invests in ominously as "CIA-backed," as if they were phony companies serving as cover for spy capers.

But in interviews with more than a dozen current and former CIA officials, congressional aides, venture capitalists that have worked with it and executives who have benefited from it, no one disputed that what began as an experiment in transferring private-sector technology into the CIA is working as intended. The Army, NASA and other intelligence and defense agencies have, or are planning, their own "venture capital" efforts based on the In-Q-Tel model.

"On a scale from one to 10, I would give it an 11," said A.B. "Buzzy" Krongard , the CIA's former No. 3 official and a former investment banker. "It's done so well even Congress is taking credit for it."

Yet In-Q-Tel remains an experiment that even its most ardent backers say has yet to prove its full potential.

"In my view the organization has been far more successful than I dreamed it would be," said Norman R. Augustine , who was recruited in 1998 by Krongard and George J. Tenet, who then was director of central intelligence, to help set up In-Q-Tel. Augustine, former chief executive of defense giant Lockheed Martin, is an In-Q-Tel trustee. "But my view is also that it's still an unproved experiment."

Judging In-Q-Tel by the standards of conventional venture capital funds, it's too small to rank among the major players, yet its financial returns have been impressive.

In-Q-Tel has invested a total of $16.3 million in the stock of start-up companies. That's not much in the world of the venture capital firms it usually co-invests with: Even the smallest venture fund is at least $20 million.

Of the $117.8 million in CIA money In-Q-Tel has spent on tech transfer programs since it began, only 14 percent has been spent on direct equity investments. The rest has gone toward contracts with its portfolio companies to buy licenses and develop technology tailored to specific CIA needs.

Typically, In-Q-Tel spends $500,000 to $2 million on a company with technology of interest to the CIA. But only 15 percent of that is in form of an equity investment.

Yet that venture capital component is vital to In-Q-Tel's mission. Venture investing makes In-Q-Tel -- and by extension the CIA -- a player in the early-stage technology world where venture capital is the currency.

Of the 77 companies in which In-Q-Tel has invested directly, 10 have failed. Its internal rate of return -- the standard measurement for VC funds -- on all of its investments is 26 percent, chief executive Gilman Louie said. That's a very high return. Industry research shows that most venture funds founded since 1999 are in negative territory. But most of In-Q-Tel's investments haven't been cashed out yet, so returns could still go south.

In-Q-Tel has invested in and worked with a computer gaming developer, a company that makes software to analyze huge volumes of voice recordings, data security firms, a semiconductor maker, a firm that designed software for Las Vegas casinos to track relationships between casino customers and employees, and a company whose software can tell you, in less than 10 seconds, how many dangling participles are in "Moby Dick."

Exactly how all that stuff is being used by the CIA and other intelligence agencies is less clear -- and mostly secret.

A study of In-Q-Tel that Tenet commissioned in 2001 said the organization was doing good work but that the technologies it discovered weren't being put to good use by the CIA. It said the agency needed "a cultural change that accepts solutions from the 'outside world.' "

Donald M. Kerr , who was named the CIA's deputy director for science and technology that year, said the problem was addressed by his staff of technologists, known inside the agency as the In-Q-Tel Interface Center, or Quick.

"It's the other essential piece of this," said Kerr, who last month left the agency to head the National Reconnaissance Center, a spy-satellite agency. "Absent Quick, it would be like people throwing ideas over the transom with no one there to catch them. . . . Quick breaks down the barriers to people using new technology and new things."

In-Q-Tel has done well as a venture firm in its first five years, chief executive Louie said, and done well at moving technology into the CIA. "The next five years we have to answer the question, 'So what?'"

The only success that matters, Louie said, is if a technology that In-Q-Tel identifies is directly responsible for saving American lives and "prevents something very bad from happening."

Terence O'Hara's e-mail address isoharat@washpost.com.



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (92309)8/23/2005 6:36:19 PM
From: scion  Respond to of 122087
 
In-Q-Tel's Louie: IT security policies have become self-defeating

By William Jackson
Contributing Staff Writer
07/29/05

LAS VEGAS—The head of the CIA's venture-capital arm told an audience of cybersecurity experts earlier this week that misguided IT security policies have paralyzed the government's ability to share vital national-security data. "From an IT perspective, we are losing the war on terror," said Gilman Louie, president and CEO of In-Q-Tel. "The bad guys are winning because we have convinced ourselves that our networks are so insecure, and that we are unable to protect information on them, that we don't put information on our systems."

Louie, speaking at the Black Hat Briefings computer security conference, said this paralysis impedes our ability to protect ourselves from terrorist attacks such as the recent bombings carried out on London's transportation systems.

"People are going to die," he said. "Attack is imminent. London is coming to the United States."

In-Q-Tel was chartered to help fund the commercial development of technologies that could be used by the intelligence community. The name was inspired by the gadget master known only as “Q” in the James Bond movies.

Louie said that layers of information security are inhibiting the use of vital information. Almost four years after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, little progress has been made on information-sharing between and among government agencies.

"We fundamentally don't have it," Louie said. "We are crippled beyond your wildest imagination. We can't even get a simple thing like e-mail to work across agencies" because no one trusts anyone else, he lamented.

Louie blamed the problem on policies created by non-IT professionals restricting the use of technology because its security is less than perfect. "Perfection is the enemy of the good," he said. Such policies could be increasing the nation's risk rather than reducing it.

The solution, according to Louie: "Shoot all the lawyers in the room [and] shoot all the 'Dr. No's"—policy-compliance types who blindly insist on layers of security that inhibit rather than enable the use of information. "Either educate them, get rid of them or send them to Siberia."

Louie said the focus of IT should be the effective use of information, and that security is only one function of that. That focus is reflected in his work at In-Q-Tel, he added.

"The interesting stuff we're working on right now is in visual sciences," that enable an understanding of how information is used across a system so that the value of sharing it can be balanced against security risks.

William Jackson is a staff writer for Washington Technology’s sister publication, Government Computer News.

washingtontechnology.com



To: Jeffrey S. Mitchell who wrote (92309)8/23/2005 8:03:37 PM
From: scion  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
NAKED TRUTH

By RODDY BOYD

August 23, 2005 -- A self-employed West Coast businessman operating under the Web pseudonym "Bob O'Brien" in investing chat rooms is aligned with Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne in his campaign against short-sellers targeting his embattled company.
Choosing to mask his real identity out of concerns for his personal safety, "O'Brien" has been an aggressive supporter of Byrne's crusade.

In return, Byrne has donated generously to O'Brien's National Coalition Against Naked Shorting, a group that has taken out two large ads in the Washington Post and acts as the Internet clearinghouse for the fight against naked short sales. In naked shorting, the seller has not borrowed the stock, a violation of Securities and Exchange Commission rules.

Byrne singled out "O'Brien" for praise in his now-famous conference call in which he discussed his theory about a large, complex conspiracy allegedly plaguing his company.

Last Thursday, short-selling hedge fund Rocker Partners named "O'Brien" as a likely defendant in a soon-to-be filed lawsuit, according to a press release sent out by the fund's law firm.

The Post believes that "O'Brien" is a man named Phillip Ross Saunders, with investments and property in Nevada — in both Carson City and Las Vegas — as well as Southern California.

In conversations with a Post reporter last week, Saunders acknowledged living and working in Nevada and Southern California.

Saunders refused to confirm or deny his identity or connection to the "O'Brien" moniker and said that he will not entertain speculation about his identity for safety purposes.

The Post's research also indicated that Saunders' background includes several ventures selling medical equipment; several of "O'Brien's" e-mails obtained by The Post contained discussions of his background with medical equipment.

Initially, he did this in a corporation chartered in California called MCP Equipment, a subsidiary of MCP International, which he appears to have sold in 2002.

He since opened a medical equipment company chartered in Nevada called Therapy Remarketing Group, based in Carson City. TRG, which sells CAT-Scan, X-Ray and MRI equipment, shares the same address with several other existing or dormant corporations listing Phillip R. Saunders as an officer.

A call to MCP's former Irvine, Calif., number automatically connected to TRG's answering machine. A message left for "Phil" on TRG's system was not returned.

Asked for comment, Saunders dismissed this information as "anecdotal" and "six degrees of separation."

Where "Bob O'Brien" has really made his mark, however, is on the Internet. He is an aggressive and occasionally controversial presence on several Yahoo! boards, where he routinely savages short-sellers and the financial press.

Saunders is linked to the NCANS site via the Lycaon Group, which, according to Saunders, is a group advising companies under attack from naked short-sellers.

Though the link was taken down late last week, The Post learned that as of June, the Lycaon Group's Web site owner was a "Brett Kelts" of MCP International.

A call to the Lycaon site's contact number connected directly to Saunders' TRG in Carson City, although no one by the name of "Brett" is listed on the system.

Another apparent slip-up occurred in an April 13 posting on the NFI Yahoo! message board when a file edited in a Windows account licensed to "Psaunders" was able to be accessed. The file was posted to the NCANS Web site that night.

The poster announcing that he had uploaded the file, "dirtydirtydeeds," was the acknowledged screen name of "Bob O'Brien."

Asked for comment, Saunders said "about four different" NCANS members had the first initial "P" and the last name of "Saunders." He declined to provide contact information for them.

nypost.com