S04 E05: Melisa Stivaletti, the Queen of OSINT, on Elevating OSINT with AI, Private-Public Synergy, and MoreGuest introduction & background
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• Melisa describes how the 2010–11 Arab Spring revealed the power of social-media data while she was a Department of the Army civilian in Afghanistan.
• Since then she has worked across academia, federal agencies, and the private sector to professionalize open-source intelligence, currently serving as OSINT Director at Guidehouse and chair of AFCEA’s Emerging Professionals in the Intelligence Community (EPIC) committee.
Why OSINT matters now
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• Every modern investigation—military, law-enforcement, or corporate—relies on publicly available information (PAI); skipping it “short-changes” the mission.
• Recent unclassified U.S. DoD, ODNI, and Army OSINT strategies publicly signal a whole-of-government commitment and an invitation for industry partnership.
• Congress has underscored this shift with the first House Subcommittee dedicated to open-source intelligence.
Public-private synergy & funding gaps
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• Dual-use commercial tools and venture-backed research and development give the U.S. an edge, but the Intelligence Community still allocates
less than 1% of its budget • to OSINT despite the discipline providing
roughly 30% of material in the President’s Daily Brief • .
• Cloud storage, advanced data sets, and continuous tool development make OSINT “cheap relative to satellites” but far from free; chronic underfunding risks hollowing out capabilities.
Generative AI opportunities & cautions
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• Large language models accelerate sense-making (summarization, triage, translation) amid an ever-expanding data ocean.
• Analysts must demand rigorous sourcing and bias evaluation—“every AI-generated sentence needs a footnote”—and should favor secure, controlled models over public chatbots.
• The real value lies in “a collector who knows how to use AI,” not in AI replacing human tradecraft.
Operational vs. strategic OSINT
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• Tactical users (SOF, JSOC) need rapid, geotagged, mission-ready insights; strategic analysts focus on long-term trends, indications & warnings, and partner sharing.
• Both require advanced skills—data science, cyber forensics, provenance verification—not just “having an internet connection.”
Professionalization & future skills
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• Formal tradecraft standards, dedicated career paths, and prompt-engineering expertise are emerging to match HUMINT, SIGINT, and GEOINT.
• Melisa urges the next generation of intel professionals to embrace OSINT’s complexity, continuous learning curve, and growing strategic impact.
Persistent misconceptions debunked
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• Myth #1: OSINT is “free.” Reality: tooling, storage, and talent are expensive and scaling.
• Myth #2: OSINT is inferior to classified sources. Reality: it often provides the first, fastest, and sometimes only vantage point—and stands on equal analytic rigor.
Special Guest: Melisa Stivaletti .
32|30M
