homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Every six hours, the NSA collects data the size of the Library of Congress

With the whole Osama operation that’s been dabbling all over news right now, intelligence and surveillance is coming to mind to a lot of people, not just the paranoid. During this time, agencies like the FBI, CIA or NSA have all delivered various press releases detailing the event, praising the valient action of this delicate […]

Tibi Puiu
May 11, 2011 @ 10:49 am

share Share

With the whole Osama operation that’s been dabbling all over news right now, intelligence and surveillance is coming to mind to a lot of people, not just the paranoid. During this time, agencies like the FBI, CIA or NSA have all delivered various press releases detailing the event, praising the valient action of this delicate joint intelligence operation. The later however, dropped a jaw dropping number in its typical casual matter: every six hours, the agency collects as much data as it is stored in the entire Library of Congress.

That’s something to think about. If you put it in perspective, the Library in Congress isn’t that large – at  20 million books stored by the LC, each zipped to 1MB, it would add up to 20 TerraBites, a number often quoted when the data stored by the LC is concerned. However, this is quite a deceiving number since the LC has millions of photos, maps, films and other material stored. The real amount would add up to roughly 3 petabytes (3,000 terabytes), and every six hours the NSA collects this amount.

It’s not clear if the amount is stored or just processed and then some of it dumped, but it’s still a whopping fact – a very expensive one. By law, the NSA’s budget isn’t made public but expect something monstrous. The data the NSA gathers includes transcripts of phone calls and in-house discussions, video and audio surveillance and a MASSIVE amount of photographs.

Much of the data gathered is filled by recorded phone calls containing various keywords, anything from “cocaine”, to “bomb”, and one can only wonder how the NSA can process this kinda of immense and expensive volumen of data. The truth is, they can’t.

“The volume of data they’re pulling in is huge,” said John V. Parachini, director of the Intelligence Policy Center at RAND. “One criticism we might make of our [intelligence] community is that we’re collection-obsessed — we pull in everything — and we don’t spend enough time or money to try and understand what do we have and how can we act upon it.”

And you thought your DVDs with Seinfeld were filling your HDD, huh?

share Share

This Polish radio station fired all its journalists and replaced them with AI hosts -- and people are furious

"It is a dangerous precedent that hits us all," said fired journalists.

A timeline chart of SciFi predictions that eventually became true

I pride myself on being a science fiction buff. Asimov, Clark, Wells, Jules Verne — there’s a reason why we’ve all come to love these classics. What makes people so fond of science fiction, though? One may argue that it’s these novel’s uncanny ability to dwell the human mind and foresee things that are yet […]

Your spreadsheets probably suck — 94% of business spreadsheets have errors in them

Here's one productivity hack no one talks about: check your spreadsheets.

You've heard of Doomscrolling, but have you ever tried Hopescrolling?

Algorithms have been manipulating you for a while. It's time to manipulate them back to find positivity and happiness.

Sailors rescued from remote island after writing big "HELP" on the beach

It's not just for movies. Writing 'HELP' can really help.

British military successfully tests laser weapon that zaps drones mid-air

Laser weapons are no longer limited to movies and cartoons.

If a nuclear war happened, seaweed could save the last survivors

Seaweed is rich in nutrients and if everything turns south -- it's something we should consider.

The pristine Blue river in Greenland actually highlights intensifying climate heating

In the remote, icy expanse of northern Greenland, the onset of spring transforms the landscape into a surreal scene. Meltwater channels, born from rising temperatures, carve through the ice, creating striking, pure blue streams and lakes. These natural phenomena are both mesmerizing and alarming, highlighting the impacts of climate change. Expeditions, like Greenpeace’s in 2009, […]

I watched Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer in Ukraine: his Greek tragedy is our reality

Nolan's new movie resonates with many.

This creepy AI-generated beer commercial is a cautionary psychedelic nightmare

Did someone spike the beer with LSD?