PRIM has existed since 2002


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DATE: July 16, 2013, 10:09 p.m.

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  2. PRISM has existed since at least 2002, not 2007 as is being reported.
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  4. "Planning Tool for Resource Integration, Synchronization, and Management." aka PRISM has existed since at least 2002. The following document refers to it directly. This demonstrates PRISM not only existed in July 2002, but it had been undergoing usage for some time, enough time to recognize limitation of it and similar projects.
  5. *Document #1 (2002)
  6. isrinformationservices.pdf
  7. "ISR Information Services
  8. Lessons from the Web-Enabling Front
  9. The MITRE Corporation Center for Integrated Intelligence Systems
  10. July 2002"
  11. "This paper describes lessons learned from a MITRE research initiative to address Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) network centric web enablement goals. MITRE has engaged the Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) and Command and Control (C2) communities to demonstrate what is possible today in applying Web technology to give the war-fighter access to real-time ISR information via the battlespace networks."
  12. http://www.mitre.org/work/tech_papers/tech_papers_02/kane_isrplatforms/
  13. http://www.mitre.org/work/tech_papers/tech_papers_02/kane_isrplatforms/isrinformationservices.pdf
  14. https://anonfiles.com/file/48b1e1aacf863236b9a7b63a4bde3b07
  15. This is not a hack or a leak, this is a publicly available document from mitre.org as you can see here:
  16. http://bayimg.com/BANakAAEM
  17. =GnonLP=D
  18. GnonLP@hushmail.com
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  20. Approved for Public Release
  21. ISR Information Services
  22. —Lessons from the Web-Enabling Front
  23. The MITRE Corporation
  24. Center for Integrated Intelligence Systems
  25. July 2002
  26. The Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) has described a vision where people connected by a trusted, dependable, and ubiquitous network are empowered by their ability to access information and are recognized for the inputs they provide. This network-centric way of operating is based on three goals:
  27. * Make information available on a network that people depend on and trust;
  28. * Populate the network with new, dynamic sources of information to defeat the enemy;
  29. * Deny the enemy advantages and exploit weaknesses.
  30. This paper describes lessons learned from a MITRE research initiative to address the second objective. MITRE has engaged the Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) and Command and Control (C2) communities to demonstrate what is possible today in applying Web technology to give the war-fighter access to real-time ISR information via the battlespace networks, for example, NIPRNET, SIPRNET, JWICS, NATO BICES and LOCE, etc.
  31. ........
  32. * Collection management programs will be the catalyst for Web enablement.
  33. We have seen the most interest in the ISRIS concept from collection management programs that seek access to tactical ISR mission information. These are programs like Collection Management Mission Applications (CMMA), Planning Tool for Resource Integration, Synchronization, and Management (PRISM), and Surveillance and Reconnaissance Management Tool (SRMT). These programs need to fuse theater and organic-level ISR source data with the national data that they already possess to provide a complete collection, sensor, and mission picture to their users. Currently, their only recourse is to negotiate stovepipe source data feeds and APIs with each data provider. We have been working with these programs and the data providers to create Web-enabled information services like ISRIS that can provide a network-based common access point for obtaining the information they need.
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