DAILY TECH E-LETTER | ARCHIVES
SEARCH: Search Options
Technology Home
Washtech
Tech Policy
Government IT
Markets
Columnists
Personal Tech
Special Reports
Jobs
Advertisement
Company Postings
Get Quotes
Press Releases
Tech Almanac

CIA Developing Software to Scour Photos

Advertisement

_____Technology Headlines_____
Updated Technology Headlines

E-Mail This Article
Printer-Friendly Version
By TED BRIDIS
The Associated Press
Tuesday, June 3, 2003; 3:04 PM

WASHINGTON - The CIA is bankrolling efforts to improve technology designed to scour millions of digital photos or video clips for particular cars or street signs or even, some day, human faces.

The innovative software from fledgling PiXlogic LLC of Los Altos, Calif., promises to help analysts make better use of the CIA's enormous electronic archives. Analysts also could be alerted whenever a helicopter or other targeted item appeared in a live video broadcast.

PiXlogic plans to announce Wednesday that the CIA's venture-capital organization, In-Q-Tel, has invested an unspecified amount to help the company improve the software.

In-Q-Tel - named for "Q," the fictional inventor of fanciful spy gadgetry for James Bond - makes about a dozen such investments annually with roughly $35 million it receives from the CIA's Directorate of Science and Technology. In-Q-Tel was created in February 1999 and has gained favorable reviews from Capitol Hill.

"There was a great deal of interest in these capabilities," Mike Griffin, In-Q-Tel's president said of the picture-monitoring effort. "Because more and more of what is on the Internet is in visual form, the ability to search on those materials is important and getting more important all the time."

Neither In-Q-Tel nor PiXlogic would disclose terms of the deal, though executives said similar arrangements typically have been between $500,000 to $2.5 million. In-Q-Tel is organized as a nonprofit firm, and Griffin said it doesn't put onerous conditions on companies that earn its funding.

"We're making a bet. We want them to succeed," he said. "This is a way for government to tap into cutting-edge, state-of-the-art technology."

PiXlogic's founders include Vladimir Troyanker, a Russian who left the company shortly after obtaining a U.S. patent for early generations of the search technology. Troyanker said he never dreamed when he moved to the United States in 1998 that the CIA - his native country's arch enemy during the Cold War - might find the technology useful.

"The world then and the world now are two different places," said Troyanker, who works as a contractor for a telecommunications company.

PiXlogic's chief executive, Joseph Santucci, said the company is probably one year from adding effective, face-recognition features to its software to help the CIA track photographs or videos of specific people.

The cloak-and-dagger software presently has only rudimentary ability to recognize a person's face and then find other photos and video footage of that person, although a demonstration of this feature by Santucci worked almost flawlessly.

PiXlogic executives hope to work through other companies to bring a version of the technology to consumers who have digital cameras and need help organizing their libraries.

Many current visual-search products rely on photographers or editors to manually assign keywords, dates or categories to photographs or videos describing their content, such as "soccer game" or "President Bush speech." A few systems can study prominent colors in a picture to recognize that objects, for example, are mostly yellow or blue.

PiXlogic's software analyzes each photograph or video frame, identifies items by geometry, color and other qualities, and stores those details in tiny computer files associated with each image. It can quickly compare details from a sample image - a photograph of a type of car, for example - against details from millions of other images in a private picture library or on the Web.

CONTINUED
1 2     Next >
Printer-Friendly Version of Full Article


TechNews.com Home

© 2003 The Associated Press

Company Postings: Quick Quotes | Tech Almanac
About TechNews.com | Advertising | Contact TechNews.com | Privacy
My Profile | Rights & Permissions | Subscribe to print edition | Syndication