Associated PressMcLEAN, Va. (AP) — In an anonymous industrial park, CIA analysts who jokingly call themselves the "ninja librarians" are mining the mass of information people publish about themselves overseas, tracking everything from common public opinion to revolutions.The group's effort gives the White House a daily snapshot of the world built from tweets, newspaper articles and Facebook updates.The agency's Open Source Center sometimes looks at 5 million tweets a day. The analysts are also checking out TV news channels, local radio stations, Internet chat rooms — anything overseas that people can access and contribute to openly.The Associated Press got an apparently unprecedented view of the center's operations, including a tour of the main facility. The AP agreed not to reveal its exact location and to withhold the identities of some who work there because much of the center's work is secret.
Saturday, November 5, 2011
AP Exclusive: CIA tracks revolt by Tweet, Facebook
By KIMBERLY DOZIER, AP Intelligence Writer
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