
Deploying Lawful Intelligence in an IoT World
Today, the Internet of Things (or IoT) is a common part of our lives. Internet-connected thermostats enable us to make better energy decisions and we
Digital society provides a multitude of data-driven clues for analysts across law enforcement and the intelligence community. Intercepted communications content (CC) and metadata are routinely augmented
With 5G deployments ongoing and 6G some years away, 3GPP Release 18 provides an evolutionary step forward with the first 5G Advanced (5.5G) standard, enhancing performance, efficiency, and flexibility.
Controlling borders is vital to every country’s national interest, from managing immigration to preventing drug smuggling, human trafficking, and terrorism - but physical barriers are no longer enough.
In the coming years, AI is expected to dramatically accelerate the evolution of lawful intelligence, giving law enforcement agencies the ability to efficiently draw insight from data at unprecedented scale.
Quantum Computing may enable communications that do not travel across a network in the conventional sense and endanger traditional encryption methods, carrying critical implications for lawful intelligence.
Today, the Internet of Things (or IoT) is a common part of our lives. Internet-connected thermostats enable us to make better energy decisions and we
Communication Service Providers (CSPs), including those that provide Over-the-Top (OTT) services, are obligated by law, to provide lawful intercept capabilities. This ensures that when law
Location information is gathered from connected devices including mobile phones. It is a critical data point which, when used by Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs), tracks
Communications have shifted from traditional (voice, email and SMS offered by telecom operators) to encrypted, over-the-top (OTT) applications. Which unfortunately leaves law enforcement agencies (LEAs)
As bandwidth increases by up to 100x in the next 24 months, law enforcement agencies (LEAs) may find it difficult to manage the amount of
Social Network Analysis (SNA) methods are the subject of this first blog in a series of blogs on analytics techniques, with the discussion focused on
I was reading an article in the most recent issue of Science News that focused on the need for analyzing cellular phone communications by criminals.
Today’s Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) and related intelligence organizations are under siege on a number of fronts, and will need to change and evolve decades
The topic of OSINT (open source intelligence), and specifically social media intelligence, found its way into the defense and military conversation quite frequently at last
THE DATA SILO DILEMMA FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT
How to Ingest, Filter and Query 5G Volumes
Webinar Presented by Kevin McTiernan