http://www.informationweek.com/story/IWK20030307S0012

InformationWeek > David Post and Bradford C. Brown > On The Horizon: 
Your Computer Could Help Fight Terrorism > March  7, 2003

On The Horizon: Your Computer Could Help Fight Terrorism March 10, 2003



Volunteering your PC just might make the world a safer place
By David Post and Bradford C. Brown


Here's a problem that's becoming more familiar: You have oceans of data, 
tera-byte after terabyte of information, about something. Your job is to 
sift through all of this information to find anything out of the 
ordinary, something that, if only you could find it, could prove 
important, valuable, or both.

The scientists involved in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence 
-- SETI -- face just such a problem in the form of the immense stream of 
data being produced by radio telescopes around the globe about 
electromagnetic emissions from across the visible universe. Getting the 
information isn't the problem; sifting through it to find anything that 
might represent a signal is a number-crunching task of gigantic proportions.

A group of astronomers and computer scientists at the University of 
California, Berkeley, is solving this problem in a fairly audacious 
manner. Their project, dubbed SETI@ home, breaks the data stream into 
millions of tiny fragments. Each fragment gets sent to a volunteer for 
processing. These volunteers have installed on their computers the 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] software, which detects when their CPUs aren't engaged, runs 
the analyses on the data fragments, and sends them back to the 
scientists at Berkeley.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] lets people donate their spare processing power to this 
project, which turns the global network into a massive parallel 
processor of enormous power. The numbers are staggering: More than 4 
million volunteers have donated more than 1 million years of CPU time, 
performing more than 2 billion trillion (2 times 10 to the 21st power) 
mathematical operations at a rate of 49.23 trillion operations per 
second (compared with around 12 trillion operations per second for the 
fastest supercomputer). This data and more can be found on the [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Web site at www.setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu.

The bottom line: The $500,000 spent on the [EMAIL PROTECTED] project built a 
virtual machine that's some four to five times faster than a 
top-of-the-line supercomputer, which costs around $110 million. It got 
us thinking. The experts say that intelligence will be our primary 
weapon in the war on terrorism, and that the problem up to this point 
has been a lack of analytic resources to make use, in real time, of much 
of the information already collected. Why not take a page from the 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] book and recruit volunteers to help process this data? If 4 
million people have volunteered to use their computers to help find 
alien civilizations, surely 10 times that many would want to help 
protect Americans from attack. You'd have a computer of unimaginable 
power at your disposal.

There will certainly be all sorts of problems that must be solved before 
this could become a reality, and perhaps there are insurmountable 
security issues. On the other hand, maybe this is just the kind of crazy 
idea that could actually work and make the world a better, safer place.

David Post is a Temple University law professor and senior fellow at the 
National Center for Technology and Law at the George Mason University 
School of Law. Reach him at [EMAIL PROTECTED] Bradford C. Brown is 
chairman of the National Center for Technology and Law at the George 
Mason University School of Law. Reach him at [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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