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The Office of the Director of National Intelligence has announced they are developing an AI tool to unmask anonymous writers.
IARPA KICKS OFF RESEARCH INTO LINGUISTIC FINGERPRINT TECHNOLOGY
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
ODNI News Release No. 14-22
September 27, 2022
IARPA Kicks off Research Into Linguistic Fingerprint Technology
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA), the research and development arm of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, today announced the launch of a program that seeks to engineer novel artificial intelligence technologies capable of attributing authorship and protecting authors’ privacy.
The Human Interpretable Attribution of Text Using Underlying Structure (HIATUS) program represents the Intelligence Community’s latest research effort to advance human language technology. The resulting innovations could have far-reaching impacts, with the potential to counter foreign malign influence activities; identify counterintelligence risks; and help safeguard authors who could be endangered if their writing is connected to them
The program’s goals are to create technologies that:
Through a competitive Broad Agency Announcement, IARPA awarded HIATUS research contracts to the following lead organizations, which together bring more than 20 academic institutions, non-profits, and businesses into the program:
IARPA invests in high-risk, high-payoff research programs to tackle some of the most difficult challenges of the agencies and disciplines in the Intelligence Community. Additional information on IARPA and its research may be found on www.iarpa.gov.
www.dni.gov
IARPA KICKS OFF RESEARCH INTO LINGUISTIC FINGERPRINT TECHNOLOGY
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
ODNI News Release No. 14-22
September 27, 2022
IARPA Kicks off Research Into Linguistic Fingerprint Technology
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA), the research and development arm of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, today announced the launch of a program that seeks to engineer novel artificial intelligence technologies capable of attributing authorship and protecting authors’ privacy.
The Human Interpretable Attribution of Text Using Underlying Structure (HIATUS) program represents the Intelligence Community’s latest research effort to advance human language technology. The resulting innovations could have far-reaching impacts, with the potential to counter foreign malign influence activities; identify counterintelligence risks; and help safeguard authors who could be endangered if their writing is connected to them
The program’s goals are to create technologies that:
- Perform multilingual authorship attribution by identifying stylistic features — such as word choice, sentence phrasing, organization of information — that help determine who authored a given text.
- Protect the author’s privacy by modifying linguistic patterns that indicate the author’s identity.
- Implement explainable AI techniques that provide novice users an understanding, trust, and verification as to why a particular text is attributable to a specific author or why a particular revision will preserve an author’s privacy.
Through a competitive Broad Agency Announcement, IARPA awarded HIATUS research contracts to the following lead organizations, which together bring more than 20 academic institutions, non-profits, and businesses into the program:
- Charles River Analytics, Inc.
- Leidos, Inc.
- Raytheon BBN
- SRI International
- University of Pennsylvania
- University of Southern California
IARPA invests in high-risk, high-payoff research programs to tackle some of the most difficult challenges of the agencies and disciplines in the Intelligence Community. Additional information on IARPA and its research may be found on www.iarpa.gov.
IARPA Kicks off Research Into Linguistic Fingerprint Technology
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ODNI News Release No. 14-22 September 27, 2022 IARPA Kicks off Research Into Linguistic Fingerprint Technology WAS...