Search a title or topic

Over 20 million podcasts, powered by 

Player FM logo
Artwork

Content provided by Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, LLC, Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, and LLC. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, LLC, Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, and LLC or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

S04 E04: Operationalizing Publicly Available Information

43:09
 
Share
 

Manage episode 480165085 series 3491074
Content provided by Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, LLC, Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, and LLC. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, LLC, Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, and LLC or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Former Green Beret and national-security advocate Doug Livermore joins the ShadowDragon team to unpack how publicly available information (PAI) and commercial open-source intelligence (OSINT) are transforming modern conflict—and why agile private-sector partners now shape outcomes as much as governments do.

Key points & take-aways

  • Breaking the “intel vs. ops” firewall

    * U.S. commanders once distrusted anything that didn’t come from classified HUMINT or SIGINT; today, PAI often drives the find-fix-finish cycle faster than traditional sources. 
  • Field lessons from five theaters

    * Iraq, Afghanistan, Mali, the DRC, and the Central African Republic showed that PAI is frequently the only data commanders can legally share with immature or non-NATO partner forces. * Cheap commercial tools—Google Maps, social media scraping, Internet-of-Things exhaust—now reveal patterns of life, financial flows, and physical locations in minutes. 
  • Cultural turning points

    * The Arab Spring (2010) and ISIS propaganda boom (2014-15) proved that open networks can topple regimes and expose targets. * Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war brought OSINT to prime time, with private analysts mapping tank battalions and documenting war crimes in real time. 
  • Afghanistan 2021: Private networks move faster than states

    * Livermore’s nonprofits No One Left Behind and SOAA used PAI, commercial satellites, and encrypted chat to steer evacuees past Taliban checkpoints when official channels bogged down. * U.S. intelligence officers quietly pulled data from these civilian ops centers—a preview of future public-private crisis response. 
  • Information warfare & influence ops

    * Open digital terrain lets both democracies and adversaries micro-target audiences, erode civil trust, or rally global support; mastering sentiment analysis is now a core skill for operators. 
  • Policy & the road ahead

    * Expect formalized private-public frameworks that let nonprofits and tech firms plug straight into combatant-command fusion cells. * Civil-liberties safeguards must keep pace, distinguishing U.S. person data from foreign-adversary exploitation. 

Special Guest: Doug Livermore.

  continue reading

14 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 480165085 series 3491074
Content provided by Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, LLC, Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, and LLC. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, LLC, Daniel Clemens from ShadowDragon, and LLC or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Former Green Beret and national-security advocate Doug Livermore joins the ShadowDragon team to unpack how publicly available information (PAI) and commercial open-source intelligence (OSINT) are transforming modern conflict—and why agile private-sector partners now shape outcomes as much as governments do.

Key points & take-aways

  • Breaking the “intel vs. ops” firewall

    * U.S. commanders once distrusted anything that didn’t come from classified HUMINT or SIGINT; today, PAI often drives the find-fix-finish cycle faster than traditional sources. 
  • Field lessons from five theaters

    * Iraq, Afghanistan, Mali, the DRC, and the Central African Republic showed that PAI is frequently the only data commanders can legally share with immature or non-NATO partner forces. * Cheap commercial tools—Google Maps, social media scraping, Internet-of-Things exhaust—now reveal patterns of life, financial flows, and physical locations in minutes. 
  • Cultural turning points

    * The Arab Spring (2010) and ISIS propaganda boom (2014-15) proved that open networks can topple regimes and expose targets. * Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war brought OSINT to prime time, with private analysts mapping tank battalions and documenting war crimes in real time. 
  • Afghanistan 2021: Private networks move faster than states

    * Livermore’s nonprofits No One Left Behind and SOAA used PAI, commercial satellites, and encrypted chat to steer evacuees past Taliban checkpoints when official channels bogged down. * U.S. intelligence officers quietly pulled data from these civilian ops centers—a preview of future public-private crisis response. 
  • Information warfare & influence ops

    * Open digital terrain lets both democracies and adversaries micro-target audiences, erode civil trust, or rally global support; mastering sentiment analysis is now a core skill for operators. 
  • Policy & the road ahead

    * Expect formalized private-public frameworks that let nonprofits and tech firms plug straight into combatant-command fusion cells. * Civil-liberties safeguards must keep pace, distinguishing U.S. person data from foreign-adversary exploitation. 

Special Guest: Doug Livermore.

  continue reading

14 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Listen to this show while you explore
Play