This is of course good news. The present solution was always the best temporary solution as oppose to what were hopeless non solutions. It was always meant to be superseded. I just did not think it would take twenty years.
The promise is that it will be universally available inside of twelve months which appears optimistic. at least we can now be looking for it.
We are on notice for a vastly improved search engine experience.
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DARPA Is Creating a New Internet, Based Around Search
By Joshua Philipp, Epoch Times | June 23, 2015
By Joshua Philipp, Epoch Times | June 23, 2015
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1401628-darpa-is-creating-a-new-internet-based-around-search
The Internet you currently know only sees about 4 percent of the
actual Internet. The next Internet, being built by the Pentagon’s
research and development branch, aims to see the same 4 percent—as well
as the other 96 percent.
The program is called Memex, and is being designed with new search
functions that could change how we use the Internet. Memex is being
developed by the Defense Advanced Reserach Project Agency (DARPA) with
the help of 18 partners, including NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
“This is going to have a huge impact,” said Chris Mattmann, the principle investigator for NASA’s side of Memex.
Memex looks to do with raw data what social media did to online
chatrooms. It connects everything, shows its relations, and makes it
easier for users to find the piece they’re looking for.
DARPA’s key interest in Memex, at least initially, is to help map the Darknet—the Internet beneath the Internet that exists on peer-to-peer networks. They want to use Memex to help stop online human trafficking.
“It’s a game changing tool for [law enforcement],” Mattmann said,
noting, “Memex is already being actively used for law enforcement”
including by the New York County District Attorney’s Office.
Searching the Darknet
“Memex to date is focused on finding the bad things that people are doing on the Darknet,” Mattmann said.
Some parts of the Darknet are good, and there are people who use it
to bypass government censorship. Mattmann said this area isn’t their
focus, noting that they don’t plan on making the Internet “any less
anonymous.”
The Darknet is also home to many terrible things. It includes markets
for human trafficking, drugs, firearms, pedophilia, hitmen, and
hackers. It’s an area of the Internet that law enforcement is still
having trouble regulating, partly due to the fact that its networks are
not indexed by traditional search engines.
Memex may be able to change the nature of the Darknet. According to
DARPA’s website, “The use of forums, chats, advertisements, job
postings, hidden services, etc., continues to enable a growing industry
of modern slavery.”
By indexing this domain, it states, it would “enable new opportunities to uncover and defeat trafficking enterprises.”
The use of forums,
chats, advertisements, job postings, hidden services, etc., continues
to enable a growing industry of modern slavery.
Mattmann said Memex is designed to do two key things: it can look at
pixels and try to figure out what the small things mean, and it can
search metadata—the information behind all images and videos that
already exists in abundance, but is invisible to current search engines.
“Metadata is becoming something that’s really important,” Mattmann
said, noting “there is metadata associated with images and videos that
lets us draw connections with them.”
He said Memex is a technology that can sit on top of the Internet or
tools that browse the Darknet, “and it can make relationships between
images and people.”
Using this, law enforcement will be able to tell if a picture or
video was taken with the same device, and to see which other content was
created by the same individual. They can also look for connections
between drugs and the people selling them, and images of abducted people
and the people who took the pictures.
Some social networking sites already scrub metadata for things like
image location, but Mattmann noted “those sites are not what a lot of
those bad people are using.”
The New Internet
Memex isn’t just for law enforcement, however, and this is where
Mattmann’s real interests are. He wants to ensure that Memex ends up in
the hands of the everyday user.
He joined the Memex project “with the full intention that a lot of
the technologies the government is investing in at DARPA would go into
these technologies that are being downloaded thousands of time every
day.”
Parts of Memex are open source, meaning they are publicly available and can be used without licensing fees.
As a member of Apache’s all-volunteer board, Mattman has been
interested in bringing Memex to technologies like Apache that are at the
foundations of the Internet.
Apache, for example, has already started using Memex. Apache Web
servers power close to 53 percent of the Internet. Another core
technology, Drupal, has started using it, as has Google.
Mattmann said users will start noticing that their searches return
better results, with “more meaningful information, particularly on
multimedia content.”
“Searches are going to be more semantically rich,” he said, noting
that information will be easier to find, and “the information that comes
back is going to be a lot more meaningful.”
The main problem with current search engines, according to the Memex
project page at DARPA, is that it uses a “centralized, one-size-fits-all
approach that searches the Internet with the same set of tools for all
queries.”
The current model is still a heavily “manual process that does not
save sessions, requires nearly exact input with one-at-a-time entry, and
doesn’t organize or aggregate results beyond a list of links,” it
states.
“While that model has been wildly successful commercially,” DARPA states, “it does not work well for many government use cases.”
Of course, the new Internet won’t be released as a new download. It
will be integrated gradually into the existing Internet as its
development moves along, and this process has already started.
Within a year or two, Mattman said, it’s likely we’ll all be using
the Memex Internet. Referencing the “ARPANET,” the network created by
DARPA that helped create the Internet, Mattman said “the same influence
ARPANET had on the Internet, Memex will for search.”
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