OSINT practices have been documented as early as the mid-19th century in the United States and early 20th century in the United Kingdom. OSINT in the
United States traces its origins to the 1941 creation of the
Foreign Broadcast Monitoring Service (FBMS), an agency responsible for the monitoring of foreign broadcasts. An example of their work was the correlation of changes in the price of oranges in Paris with successful bombings of railway bridges during
World War II. The
Aspin-Brown Commission stated in 1996 that US access to open sources was "severely deficient" and that this should be a "top priority" for both funding and
DCI attention. In July 2004, following the
September 11 attacks, the
9/11 Commission recommended the creation of an open-source intelligence agency. In March 2005, the
Iraq Intelligence Commission recommended the creation of an open-source directorate at the CIA. Following these recommendations, in November 2005 the
Director of National Intelligence announced the creation of the DNI
Open Source Center. The Center was established to collect information available from "the Internet, databases, press, radio, television, video, geospatial data, photos and commercial imagery." In addition to collecting openly available information, it would train analysts to make better use of this information. The center absorbed the
CIA's previously existing
Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS), originally established in 1941, with FBIS head Douglas Naquin named as director of the center. Then, following the events of
9/11 the
Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act merged FBIS and other research elements into the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence creating the
Open Source Enterprise. Furthermore, the private sector has invested in tools which aid in OSINT collection and analysis. Specifically,
In-Q-Tel, a
Central Intelligence Agency supported venture capital firm in Arlington, VA assisted companies develop web-monitoring and predictive analysis tools. In December 2005, the Director of National Intelligence appointed
Eliot A. Jardines as the Assistant Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Open Source to serve as the Intelligence Community's senior intelligence officer for open source and to provide strategy, guidance and oversight for the
National Open Source Enterprise. Mr. Jardines has established the National Open Source Enterprise and authored
intelligence community directive 301. In 2008, Mr. Jardines returned to the private sector and was succeeded by
Dan Butler who is ADDNI/OS and previously Mr. Jardines' Senior Advisor for Policy.
Tools A guide by Ryan Fedasiuk, an analyst at the
Center for Security and Emerging Technology, lists six tools open-source analysts can use to stay safe and utilize operational security (
OPSEC) when conducting online investigations. These include
VPNs, cached webpages,
digital archive services, URL and file scanners, browser sandbox applications, and
antivirus software. Numerous lists of aggregated OSINT content are available on the web. The OSINT Framework contains over 30 primary categories of tools and is maintained as an open source project on
GitHub. == Risks for practitioners ==