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S04 E05: Melisa Stivaletti, the Queen of OSINT, on Elevating OSINT with AI, Private-Public Synergy, and More

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Manage episode 485276288 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://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
  • Guest introduction & background

    • Melisa describes how the 2010–11 Arab Spring revealed the power of social-media data while she was a Department of the Army civilian in Afghanistan.
    • Since then she has worked across academia, federal agencies, and the private sector to professionalize open-source intelligence, currently serving as OSINT Director at Guidehouse and chair of AFCEA’s Emerging Professionals in the Intelligence Community (EPIC) committee.
  • Why OSINT matters now

    • Every modern investigation—military, law-enforcement, or corporate—relies on publicly available information (PAI); skipping it “short-changes” the mission.
    • Recent unclassified U.S. DoD, ODNI, and Army OSINT strategies publicly signal a whole-of-government commitment and an invitation for industry partnership.
    • Congress has underscored this shift with the first House Subcommittee dedicated to open-source intelligence.
  • Public-private synergy & funding gaps

    • Dual-use commercial tools and venture-backed research and development give the U.S. an edge, but the Intelligence Community still allocates less than 1% of its budget to OSINT despite the discipline providing roughly 30% of material in the President’s Daily Brief.
    • Cloud storage, advanced data sets, and continuous tool development make OSINT “cheap relative to satellites” but far from free; chronic underfunding risks hollowing out capabilities.
  • Generative AI opportunities & cautions

    • Large language models accelerate sense-making (summarization, triage, translation) amid an ever-expanding data ocean.
    • Analysts must demand rigorous sourcing and bias evaluation—“every AI-generated sentence needs a footnote”—and should favor secure, controlled models over public chatbots.
    • The real value lies in “a collector who knows how to use AI,” not in AI replacing human tradecraft.
  • Operational vs. strategic OSINT

    • Tactical users (SOF, JSOC) need rapid, geotagged, mission-ready insights; strategic analysts focus on long-term trends, indications & warnings, and partner sharing.
    • Both require advanced skills—data science, cyber forensics, provenance verification—not just “having an internet connection.”
  • Professionalization & future skills

    • Formal tradecraft standards, dedicated career paths, and prompt-engineering expertise are emerging to match HUMINT, SIGINT, and GEOINT.
    • Melisa urges the next generation of intel professionals to embrace OSINT’s complexity, continuous learning curve, and growing strategic impact.
  • Persistent misconceptions debunked

    • Myth #1: OSINT is “free.” Reality: tooling, storage, and talent are expensive and scaling.
    • Myth #2: OSINT is inferior to classified sources. Reality: it often provides the first, fastest, and sometimes only vantage point—and stands on equal analytic rigor.

Special Guest: Melisa Stivaletti .

  continue reading

15 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 485276288 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://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
  • Guest introduction & background

    • Melisa describes how the 2010–11 Arab Spring revealed the power of social-media data while she was a Department of the Army civilian in Afghanistan.
    • Since then she has worked across academia, federal agencies, and the private sector to professionalize open-source intelligence, currently serving as OSINT Director at Guidehouse and chair of AFCEA’s Emerging Professionals in the Intelligence Community (EPIC) committee.
  • Why OSINT matters now

    • Every modern investigation—military, law-enforcement, or corporate—relies on publicly available information (PAI); skipping it “short-changes” the mission.
    • Recent unclassified U.S. DoD, ODNI, and Army OSINT strategies publicly signal a whole-of-government commitment and an invitation for industry partnership.
    • Congress has underscored this shift with the first House Subcommittee dedicated to open-source intelligence.
  • Public-private synergy & funding gaps

    • Dual-use commercial tools and venture-backed research and development give the U.S. an edge, but the Intelligence Community still allocates less than 1% of its budget to OSINT despite the discipline providing roughly 30% of material in the President’s Daily Brief.
    • Cloud storage, advanced data sets, and continuous tool development make OSINT “cheap relative to satellites” but far from free; chronic underfunding risks hollowing out capabilities.
  • Generative AI opportunities & cautions

    • Large language models accelerate sense-making (summarization, triage, translation) amid an ever-expanding data ocean.
    • Analysts must demand rigorous sourcing and bias evaluation—“every AI-generated sentence needs a footnote”—and should favor secure, controlled models over public chatbots.
    • The real value lies in “a collector who knows how to use AI,” not in AI replacing human tradecraft.
  • Operational vs. strategic OSINT

    • Tactical users (SOF, JSOC) need rapid, geotagged, mission-ready insights; strategic analysts focus on long-term trends, indications & warnings, and partner sharing.
    • Both require advanced skills—data science, cyber forensics, provenance verification—not just “having an internet connection.”
  • Professionalization & future skills

    • Formal tradecraft standards, dedicated career paths, and prompt-engineering expertise are emerging to match HUMINT, SIGINT, and GEOINT.
    • Melisa urges the next generation of intel professionals to embrace OSINT’s complexity, continuous learning curve, and growing strategic impact.
  • Persistent misconceptions debunked

    • Myth #1: OSINT is “free.” Reality: tooling, storage, and talent are expensive and scaling.
    • Myth #2: OSINT is inferior to classified sources. Reality: it often provides the first, fastest, and sometimes only vantage point—and stands on equal analytic rigor.

Special Guest: Melisa Stivaletti .

  continue reading

15 episodes

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