Intelligence
in sentence
2639 examples of Intelligence in a sentence
I'm not sure that's what an
intelligence
agency should be aiming for.
What does that say about the state of oversight in American
intelligence
when the chairman of the Senate
Intelligence
Committee has no idea that the rules are being broken thousands of times every year?
The bottom line is that terrorism has always been what we in the
intelligence
world would call a cover for action.
You obviously heard what happened, what the treatment that Bradley Manning got, Chelsea Manning as now is, and there was a story in Buzzfeed saying that there are people in the
intelligence
community who want you dead.
I am living proof that an individual can go head to head against the most powerful adversaries and the most powerful
intelligence
agencies around the world and win, and I think that's something that we need to take hope from, and we need to build on to make it accessible not just to technical experts but to ordinary citizens around the world.
In the case of Mr. Snowden, he had the option of the NSA inspector general, the Navy inspector general, the Pacific Command inspector general, the Department of Defense inspector general, and the
intelligence
community inspector general, any of whom would have both kept his concerns in classified channels and been happy to address them.
RL: So there are, when our legitimate foreign
intelligence
targets of the type that I described before, use the global telecommunications system as their communications methodology, and they do, because it's a great system, it's the most complex system ever devised by man, and it is a wonder, and lots of folks in the room there are responsible for the creation and enhancement of that, and it's just a wonderful thing.
They do, in the sense of, the only way that we are able to compel one of those companies to provide us information is when it falls into one of three categories: We can identify that this particular person, identified by a selector of some kind, is associated with counterterrorist or proliferation or other foreign
intelligence
target.
If you're not connected to one of those valid
intelligence
targets, you are not of interest to us.
I think cyber is a threat in three ways: One way, and probably the most common way that people have heard about it, is due to the theft of intellectual property, so basically, foreign countries going in, stealing companies' secrets, and then providing that information to state-owned enterprises or companies connected to the government to help them leapfrog technology or to gain business
intelligence
that's then used to win contracts overseas.
That's a lot of hard work that we have done, that other folks in the
intelligence
community have done, that the military has done, and that our allies around the globe have done.
That's us finding
intelligence
on terrorist activities and interdicting them through one way or another, through law enforcement, through cooperative activities with other countries and sometimes through military action.
CA: It's also been said that, of those 54 alleged incidents, that as few as zero of them were actually anything to do with these controversial programs that Mr. Snowden revealed, that it was basically through other forms of intelligence, that you're looking for a needle in a haystack, and the effects of these programs, these controversial programs, is just to add hay to the stack, not to really find the needle.
CA: Snowden said two days ago that terrorism has always been what is called in the
intelligence
world "a cover for action," that it's something that, because it invokes such a powerful emotional response in people, it allows the initiation of these programs to achieve powers that an organization like yours couldn't otherwise have.
I mean, we debate these things all the time, and there is discussion that goes on in the executive branch and within NSA itself and the
intelligence
community about what's right, what's proportionate, what's the correct thing to do.
So imagine if this kind of
intelligence
were thrown at your schedule, or your information needs, or things like that.
CR: When you look at all that's taken place with Deep Mind and the boxing, also a part of where we're going is artificial
intelligence.
I used to appreciate the
intelligence
and the brilliance of my daughter.
So in my lab and with colleagues, we've developed mechanisms where we can quite accurately predict things like your political preference, your personality score, gender, sexual orientation, religion, age, intelligence, along with things like how much you trust the people you know and how strong those relationships are.
And in their paper they listed the five likes that were most indicative of high
intelligence.
So how is it that one of the strongest indicators of your
intelligence
is liking this page when the content is totally irrelevant to the attribute that's being predicted?
And they liked it, and their friends saw it, and by homophily, we know that he probably had smart friends, and so it spread to them, and some of them liked it, and they had smart friends, and so it spread to them, and so it propagated through the network to a host of smart people, so that by the end, the action of liking the curly fries page is indicative of high intelligence, not because of the content, but because the actual action of liking reflects back the common attributes of other people who have done it.
We brought in dancers with biological limbs, and we studied how they move, what forces they apply on the dance floor, and we took those data, and we put forth fundamental principles of dance, reflexive dance capability, and we embedded that
intelligence
into the bionic limb.
This is an insight at the core of
intelligence.
Because that is our
intelligence
of mutation and things like that.
You start to be in the territory of intelligence, we can say.
That is
intelligence.
You are an
intelligence.
Alan Turing, a pioneer of artificial intelligence, spoke about creating the illusion that a machine could think.
I used to deal with
intelligence
agencies, and I'd complain that they weren't sharing enough intelligence, and with a straight face, they'd look at me and they'd say, "What aren't you getting?" (Laughter) I said, "If I knew that, we wouldn't have a problem."
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