STATUS OF FINAL REPORT OF PROJECT ASPIN (AUTOMATED SYSTEMS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF INTELLIGENCE, DATED JULY 1970)

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CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4
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RIPPUB
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S
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207
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November 16, 2016
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March 31, 2000
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1
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April 23, 1971
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MF
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Approved For Release 2000/05/23sfeRIAP78-04723A000300020001-4 CIA INTERNAL USE ONLY MEMORANDUM FOR: Holders of ASPIN Report SUBJECT 23 April 1971 ? ? Status of Final Report of Project ASPIN (Automated Systems for the Production of Intelligence, dated July 1970) 1. I noted recently a tendency to regard the ASPIN Report of July 1970 as a statement of the DDI position on the use of automatic data processing to support the production of intelligence. This is not the case. 2. While I agree or have no comment on the majority of the recommendations, I do disagree with certain key ASPIN recommendations, particularly those that opt for forcing centralization of data processing and management systems. I regard such centralization as premature in the light of present inadequacies in machines, technology, and systems programming. 3. I also disagree with the procedures the ASPIN Report recommends for CRS referring requesters directly to individuals or for expanding services to other agencies. I regard the recommendation for charging ADP costs to users as too expensive for the presumed benefits. 4. A more detailed discussion of these and other points is available in the DDI Information Processing Coordinator's memorandum for the Chairman of the Information Processing Board, dated 28 November 1970. 25X1A R. J. SMITH Deputy Director for Intelligence CIA INTERNAL USE ONLY GROUP 1 Approved For Release 2000/05/2-SWAEITCP78-021/723*000301102000114tic downgrading and declassification Approved For Release 20 DP78-04723A000300020001 -4 Iii)/61#&75? 7d 1 DEC 1970 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chairman, Information Processing Board SUBJECT: Comments on Report of Project ASPIN 1. The ASPIN Report has helped focus attention on the more nagging problems of computer and ADP management in the Agency. Some of the more important of these are addressed below. The rest are treated separately in an attachment. are: 2. Deficiencies that appear to need some urgent attention - There is no clear mechanism to assess the real need for an ADP project. - There is a tendency to attempt to solve line management problems by layering of staffs and coordinators. - Present systems of determining the costs of a proposed application are inadequate and ADP costs usually do not get to the attention of line management the way other costs do. - Present methods of cost accounting for ADP projects are inadequate because they do not accurately reflect the ADP resources used. - Standards for professionalism in ADP personnel are ill-defined and are not uniformly applied in recruiting, performance evaluation, and career management. LIMET Li.litzsTatfhigaiii ceclassUir.afiai Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001 -4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 - There has been inadequate planning over the long haul for the acquisition and updating of ADP resources. 3. Working within the general framework of theconclusions of the ASPIN Report, I urge that attention be focused on the following: IP Board: Costing: - Strengthen the IF Board as a central point for recommendations on the need for ADP applications whose projected costs are above some predetermined threshold. - Strengthen the IF Board as the central point for long-range planning for Agency ADP resources-- men, money, and machines. - Reaffirm the coordinating and policy advisory functions of the Board, making it clear that these functions are not intended to usurp the functions of line management. - Generate and apply a good ADP costing model to existing and projected ADP applications. - Bring these costs to the attention of higher manage- ment by requiring that they personally review in advance the costs for projected applications and review each final quarter the costs of ongoing projects. Centralization: - Encourage a higher degree of centralization for major data processing applications. SECRET Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 25X1A Al )1[4jAir Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : IA- 8-04723A000300020001-4 - 3 - -Encourage a higher degree of centralization in ADP personnel management. JOHN D IAMS Information Processing Coordinator DD/S& T Attachment: As stated cc: IPC/DDI IPC/DDP IPC/DDS CONCUR: Deputy Director for Science and Technology Date 25X1A cOECIR Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 14 I, eRtigri-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 DDS&T COMMENTS ON REPORT OF PROJECT ASPIN Approved For Release 20 November 1970 t PcitiaDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 1. FMSAC 1.4. Agree. 2. OEL 2.4. To insure internal OEL coordination between collection and analysis operations, an internal Program Review Board takes up the matter of analysis whenever a new collection system is proposed. The recommenda- tion to establish a Technical Review Panel is impractical and it is doubtful that it would perform a useful function if organized and staffed in the manner suggested. 3. OS1 3.7.1. We agree with the recommendations; OSI has been carrying them out for sometime. ???3'''''Cr'R.io .11 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2 01/6 -RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 (a) Arrangements were made with Mr. CRS, to use Project VIVAX interests in future development of the automated dissemi- nation sysiem. Since the subject area of VIVAX is narrow and highly specific (BW), it should prove a good test vehicle for Mr. content analysis. (b) OSI is using CAPRI. This system has potential for automation of personal files in a batch environment. Also, OSI will use as feasible the CRS work on personal file management suggested by Dr report. (c) OSI recognizes the magnitude of the input/output problem for ADP applications. The input problem is one of the reasons that OSI is moving slowly in automating analyst files. Optical character readers and computer output to microfilm are developments that are being followed with interest. (d) OSI has been supporting ADP education and training for its personnel. During FY 1970, 12 students enrolled in 13 different ADP courses. Their training program for FY 1971 includes 29 personnel scheduled for 7 different ADP courses. Training has led to an increased number of terminal users and a growing number of application programs. STATSPEC 5. 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A 5. 6. A study of costs/benefits should be made for the suggested areas of automated assistance before establishing automation as an ultimate objective. 9. OSR 9. 5. Agree. We understand OSR is conducting such a test now. Text Processing Systems V. A. The major thrust of the recommendations on the development of ADP systems for text processing is that this effort should be consolidated. This is probably a worthwhile recommendation when viewed in the light of altrustic goals such as eliminating duplication, pooling skills, and producing a single, coordinated plan. Elsewhere in the ASPIN Report the comment is sEct\ST Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SU.Lii?)07-- Approved For Release 200 41? WW-2-3% -RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -6- made that the user/analyst is responsible for designing his own system. It is precisely this responsibility that Will make any consolidation of effort on text processing difficult. Analysts tend to view their require- ments as unique. We agree that coordination of these activities needs strengthening, but structuring a group with Agency-wide responsibility for text processing may be as difficult as establishing a single computer center. Computer Graphics II. D. This would introduce increased flexibility but for the present we should be satisfied to get QUIKTRAK operational, get data files built, and make some evaluation of the system before enhancing it in this fashion. II. E. Agree. II. F. Agree. Organizational and Management Aspects IV. A. Agree. IV. B. Disagree; the recommendation is significantly weakened -- to the point of being =meaningful -- by the hedge of including another unspecified computer center in the Agency. Let's worry less about machine consolidation and more about policy, planning, management, and people. IV. C. An ADP career service is a red herring and should be a low priority issue. IV. D. Disagree; involves major organizational changes which would need a lot more discussion and greater consideration of pros and cons. The method of operation also suggests responsibility without authority. This won't lead to the kind of improvements in application development that the recommendation seeks. F. Organizational Implications The second recommendation applying to the duties of a proposed ADP advisor to the Executive Director-Comptroller suggests that this advisor be &i-L1=6Llid,4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23-: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 the ex officio member of the IPB. We note that this differs from the ASPIN recommendation that he be Chairman of the IPB. We prefer the latter if he stays out of line management responsibilities in the technical review and personnel fields. He should understand that if he is a substantive person of some stature in ADP, he will want to abolish his job in a fairly short time. If not, he shouldn't be hired in the first place. Structural File Systems V. A. Agree. V. D. Agree. Approved For Release 2 e ke C2RWRDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved7 Approved For SENDER WILL CHECK CLASSIFICATION TOP AND BOTTOM R le#?012K19106/213 : Clk(ROPTSTO#47213AdOORM2c OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP TO NAME AND ADDRESS DATE INITIALS DDS/IPC Mr. 705 Magazine Bldg. ACTION DIRECT REPLY PREPARE REPLY APPROVAL DISPATCH RECOMMENDATION COMMENT FILE RETURN CONCURRENCE INFORMATION SIGNATURE Remarks: FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER FROM: NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NO. DATE DD/S&T/IPC 4011 - 12/1/70 elTa4OZWASM23 : ClAk-ROPMEDEF23A000311ffliffeol FORM NO. 937 ',Ise previous editions UI (40) 001-4 25X1A 1-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23": CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 25 November 1970 SG -70/402 MEMORANDUM FCR: Chairman, Information Processing Board SUBJECT : Plans Directorate's Comments on ASPIN Recommendations 1. The Plans Directorate either agrees with or has no comments on the majority of the ASPIN recommendations. Our comments will be confined to those concerning the management of of ADP resources for the Agency. In paragraph 21 of the summary dated 2 October the cen- tral management review of major ADP projects was recommended. The DDP, as is known, has for years had a committee of senior officers, the CS Record Committee, which considers all proposals for computer .applications and which gives management guidance to the development of the CS's computer resources. Additional central management review of major activities would be welcomed. 2. This paragraph also recommends the establishment of an Agency- wide ADP career service. While I feel that there are general benefits for the individual and the service to be derived from rotating individ- uals among ADP centers, I question the concept of the centralized career service. The DDP has not been satisfied with the functioning of this concept for its support officers. Since support officers are rotated by, and promoted by organizations other than the DDP they are not always responsive to the DDP's needs. If rotation while maintaining basic directorate affiliation becomes the practice, it would be necessary to assure that personnel, particularly systems analysts, assigned to our Directorate be given sufficient time to become thoroughly familiar with its peculiar problems. 3. While the economies of scale for large processors are very great, it appears to us that the software problems are such as to pre- clude centralization of the Agency's computing powers. The CS's requirements to maintain and search a very large file with a very high volume of inquiries and to expand the support of its overseas activities from its computer center calls for the continued existence of a facility adequate to fulfill the CS's needs. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA:R078-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -2- 4. The DDP's project justification system provides adequate management review and the control of ADP costs, and therefore, the proposal to charge users is an unnecessary complication in our judgment. 25X1A IP Board Members: 25X1A IPC/DDP Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : C1A-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 fl UNCLASSIFIED ? - 030002 SC RET - , . ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET SUBJECT: (Optional) Nov 27 3 59 PH '70 FROM: IPC/DDP 1 H 5113 EXTENSION " 7833 NO, DATE 25 November 1970 TO: (Officer designation, room number, and building) DATE OFFICER'S INITIALS COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from whom to whom. Draw a line across column after each comment.) RECEIVED FORWARDED 1. IPC/DDS 710 Magazine 0472241:100q3D020001-4 2. 3. 4. . 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. ? 15. .1 A ---1 'ID- 4....ft..+ '344/4/4.14540-1 ? I" '14.12.1:11:072 T'67 610 usiD E CONFIDENTIAL r INTERNAL UNCLASSIFIED I?I USE ONLY Approved Fa-Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78:04723A000300020001-4 SECRET 23 November 1970 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chairman, Information Processing Board SUBJECT ? ? Intelligence Directorate Comments on ASPIN Recommendations We either agree or have no comment on the majority of ASPIN recommendations. Our comments on those with which we disagree either wholly or in part are attached. These comments are keyed to the attached set of consolidated general conclusions and recommendations and not to the original ASPIN report. 25X1A DDI Information Processing Coordinator Attachments: a/s Approved ForRelease2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A090- SECRE1 ? 25X1A Approved Fa:Release 20?Orep,tCIA-RDP78-104723A000300020001-4 ATTACHMENT RECOMMENDATIONS 4, 6, 7, AND 22 1. These recommendations call for: a. A single interactive system at headquarters; b. The utilization of general data management systems; c. The provision by OCS of an interactive capability for handling large information storage and retrieval files such as AEGIS, and; d. An Agency policy of a centralization of data processing in OCS. 2. The technical outlook for the machine aspects of such capabilities seems good for some time past the mid- seventies, hazards a "best" guess that by 1975 component costs will have dropped rather dramatically so that very complex large central processors will evolve which will be replete with built in control and reliability (redundancy) features. Such devel- opments are expected to greatly reduce the present impedi- ments to the development of large scale on-line systems, permit mixed mode processing of batch, remote batch and interactive foreground operations, and, despite the large increase in complexity, result in system costs half what they are today. By 1980, this same best guess suggests the advent of really large inexpensive machines--20 to 40 times the performance of today's large processors at 20-40 percent their cost--and, possibly, the advent of such low cost solid state memories that memory constraints and mechanical technology (tape drives, drums, disks, etc.) will disappear. 3. The foregoing leads us to two reactions to the ASPIN recommendations that machine operations and interactive services be highly centralized: a. While the potential economies of scale and technical feasibility appear probable, they are still several years off; Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300 0001-4 ff CI r S F ? r , Exchhiol Thp mlorintic r ,J4,1 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP7804723A000300020001-4 SECRET b. The Board should certainly keep aware in some detail of the progress of such developments over the coming years. 4. At present there is to our knowledge no general data management system capable of handling both large data files, and a wide variety of mathematical and statistical calculations. Probably there will never be a truly general (do anything - do everything) data manage- 25X1A ment system. The consultants to Project ASPIN suggested at least three types of structured files might be justified for separate treatment (biographic, statistical/tabular, and the standard index--coordinate/ hierarchic). The consultants regarded as premature any judgments with respect to free text and graphic files. Because of the engineering inefficiency and performance 25X1A degradation inherent in large, general, flexible software systems, suggests that the future development of such systems may depend in no small part on the "cheap" processors referred to above. 5. We support the recommendation that a small set of reasonably general data management systems be acquired if the IPB can identify a set which would cover a large number of Agency applications. We are not, however, very sanguine about the early advent of a system which will handle large files although we encourage the search for such a system. 6. We also would suggest caution on the part of the IPB in connection with the centralization/decentralization issue, even in the longer term. We believe that the machines will eventually become the least weighty of the elements in the decision. The responsiveness of our computerized reference activities to intelligence produc- tion will continue to be one of our principal concerns. If dedicated systems satisfy our needs in this regard, we would see little point in moving toward centralization. 7. In light of the above, we feel that to force centralization in the present environment of inadequate machines, technology and systems programming is almost certain to result in more inefficient, more costly and less responsive processing. Over the next 5-10 years technical progress may make such centralization feasible. Meanwhile, -2- Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 c! DC' - Approved For---Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP7M4723A000300020001-4 SEME we should continue with our present reasonable organizational alignment within the Agency and watch technical developments that might have an impact on our future planning. RECOMMENDATION 13 (Central Reference Operations) 8. While we agree with the general conclusion behind this recommendation--that improved knowledge of the existence of specialized collections of information is desirable--we disagree with the procedures recommended in two instances: a. The creation and maintenance in CRS of a directory of personal and organizational collections, and, b. The increased emphasis on establishing CRS as a point of contact for requests from outside the Agency. 9. The compilation of a personnel-area-subject directory of personal and organizational collections of information is an appropriate function of CRS. Direct referral of requestors to individuals throughout the Agency could prove bothersome and have a deleterious effect on their task of producing intelligence. Alterna- tively, we would support the establishment of a query control officer in each office in the Agency which holds collections of intelligence information, because we realize that queries of such collections are necessary. In conjunction, CRS and the appropriate query control officer could monitor requests and service them in the most expe- ditious manner. 10. Agency regulations already have established CRS as a point of contact for information requests from within the Agency but, except for biographic support, CRS is required to support other agencies only "to the extent possible." Because of severely reduced resource levels in recent years, we have been curtailing our services to other agencies, particularly in providing them with their own material or with material which they clearly have or should have in their own files. -3- Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRE: ? Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDPT8:04723A000300020001-4 rri n r ? 3 Lk) RECOMMENDATION 21 (ADP Advisor to ExDir) 11. This is apparently recommending a senior technical ADP specialist as an advisor to the Executive Director- Comptroller. We feel that technical problems should be solved at a much lower level and that technical feasibility should be resolved long before the ExDir must make a policy decision on an ADP matter. In any event, the technical group of the Information Processing Board should be able to handle such technical matters as might need to be brought to ExDir attention. Tasks in this recommendation relating to responsibility for establishing standards and ADP planning are covered by Recommendation 24 with which we agree. The recommendation that the ADP advisor be the head of the ADP career service is covered in Recommendation 25 below. RECOMMENDATION 23 (Charge ADP Costs to Users) 12. The notion that a charge back system somehow creates conditions of more effective utilization is a myth in a government bureaucracy. Such a system might work where personal income and expenditures are involved but the effect of this recommendation is simply a change in bookkeeping procedures. Because a charge-back system will result in an increase in bookkeeping procedures and thus costs, such a system would be not only ineffective, but more expensive. RECOMMENDATION 25 (ADP Career Service) 13. We disagree only with the ADP Career Service portion of this recommendation. We feel that the establishment of an inter-Directorate career service is only worth-while if the tasks are virtually identical despite component of assignment (e.g., communications). While there are certain basic skills common to all types of ADP processing, much of what ADP analysts do depends on whether their assignments are in a component dealing primarily with computations, signal processing, large file storage and retrieval, etc. Commonality of skills between these types of ADP tasks is probably not great enough to gain whatever advantages might accrue from a common career service and would be disadvantageous to those individuals who would prefer to pursue a career within one of the functional components. Approved For Release 2000/03/1213.: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 oc.rtoci Approved FF Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP7a:04723A000300020001-4 SECRET 2 October 1970 ASPIN - GENERAL CONCLUSIONS & RECOMMENDATIONS* INTRODUCTION 1. In general, automation systems in support of intelligence production in the Agency are functioning well. Many programs are already established as inte- gral and essential components of the research process and others will undoubtedly soon achieve this status. Resources employed in these systems are fairly exten- sive and compare generally with those utilized in support of intelligence collection or administrative tasks. While not all applications have proved cost effective, the failure rate has been surprisingly low considering the general state of the art in the computer applications field. INTELLIGENCE PRODUCTION 2. The difficulty of communication between analyst and data processor often causes delays, frustrations, and even inadequate programming in applications develop- ment. An active effort to reduce these communications problems is long overdue. We believe that the identifi- cation of the problem and recognition of the common goals of the participants is one avenue of attack on the problem. The development of programming skills within production components is obviously another, and demonstrably effective, way of breaking down communica- tion barriers. We recommend that the Information Processing Board (IPB) create the means for the development of meaningful communications between the systems analyst- programmer and the substantive analyst engaged in the common development of a computer application. *This summary has been prepared by the DDI Planning Staff from the full text of the ASPIN Report and covers only the general conclusions and recommenda- tions and excludes those relating to specific offices. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RD1:78-04723A000300020001-4 jadtalfN-1U=XIC Elnr.rrrIn7 r r 7:7? Approved Fa-Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP7804723A000300020001-4 SECRET 3. The research analyst or the analyst engaged in data reduction has been more interested in an on- line, time-sharing system than he has been in the traditional batch processing activities. Many observers believe that analyst interest in the time-sharing phenomenon is transitory. We feel, however, that there are some basic appeals to the analyst in these systems which will provide a sustained, widespread use of this system. There already is a clear demonstration from observation of NPIC as well as OCS Interactive Services that established users of ADP service can and do make wide use of time-sharing. Many analysts want a facility to create, change and rearrange files on- line in an effort to escape what they regard as tedious and unnecessary steps in present file creation and file manipulation techniques. Some have achieved this capability to a limited degree; most of this use is in the offing. We recommend that the Information Processing Board assure that the present effort to provide a general time-sharing capability in OCS to serve the interest of the Agency as a whole be strengthened to provide not only on-Line but also remote batch process- ing and remote job entry via terminals distributed so as to make them convenient to users throughout the intelligence production components. 4. The development of multiple systems militates against one of the basic requirements of the intelligence analyst -- convenience. The remote user of the time- sharing computer should be able to communicate in a single language from a single terminal to the processor(s) which contain the data he needs. Now, in fact, analysts who have both an interest in any of the large files and in quick computational capability must have two consoles and know two query languages. We recommend a single, integrated, interactive system to serve intelligence production components at headquarters. 5. The Agency has had its most serious difficulties in trying to implement large ADP applications, a familiar complaint elsewhere as well. Each of the three processing -2- Approved For Release 2000/05QIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 L 1 34:A.vd."C.L1 Approved Fol- Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP743:04723A000300020001-4 SECRET centers serving the intelligence production components, however, has at least one successful large application in operation, and each of these applications was designed to provide broad support to intelligence analysts; two of these centers are presently supporting large scale on-line activities as well. 6. We believe that the most likely future approach to large applications will be via generalized data management systems. These systems provide a common framework, yet one with great flexibility, which may be used to manipulate a variety of analyst files. Most such systems provide the ability to augment the basic operations by user supplied functions to permit greater specificity of processing. General systems to incor- porate such applications may best be acquired from commercial vendors in the interest of economy of maintenance, and simplicity and generality of system operation. We recommend that the Information Processing Board assure the acquisition, development and use of general data management systems which are sufficiently close to the general design requirements for Agency data processing applications to permit their adaptation and use for a wide range of data processing applications and data processing centers. The acquisition of such systems should be coordinated with the major users of OCS and with each of the components who have their own data processing centers, i.e., NPIC and CRS. 7. We concur in the OCS judgment that it is necessary to provide a satisfactory on-line, time- sharing service for large information storage and retrieval files. The large, on-line, missile and space file (MISTAC) is essentially unavailable at present because of development work undertaken on it in an effort to get faster response. A large ground force file (QUIKTRAK) is being operated experimentally with considerable assurance that part if not all of this system will require an interactive environment in the near future. The AEGIS document index system seems to us an excellent candidate for operation in an interactive environment in the next two to three years. -3- Approved For Release 20TE/cIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 :LILL u; Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET We recommend that the Information Processing Board, in consultation with the interested parties, assure that the OCS Interactive Services include a general data management system capable of providing quick response capability for large information storage and retrieval activities of the type characterized by the MISTAC, AEGIS, and QUIKTRAK data bases. 8. The need for development of special applica- tions will obviously continue. Analysts will continue to have specific objectives which must be achieved and which will not always fit within the framework of generalized systems. We recommend that the Information Processing Board assure that the capability for development of unique computer programs be maintained for applications whose objectives are clearly unattainable by incorpora- tion into a general data management system. 9. Several production components have been hiring and developing their own computer programmers. Although few of these individuals have the design and programming skills necessary to plan and execute a major computer application, we favor development of programming talents among production analysts largely to provide better conceptual design for applications. Professional programmer-analysts, assigned to the production components could best undertake the detailed design and programming of computer applications of any size. They could also be used to assist the production component in planning the development and evolution of computer applications. We recommend that applications programmers (this would presumably include a major share of the applica- tions divisions' personnel) from OCS be assigned to and, where feasible, colocated with analysts in the produc- tion organization for whom they are designing and programming. Their work during their period of assign- ment should be controlled by the host production organization. We also recommend that the Agency provide time as well as professional and clerical assistance to a few talented individuals each year to explore, develop, Approved For For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Qq-nr)I7.-T ulLUALZ . Approved FOTRelease 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78=04723A000300020001-4 SECRET and test essentially new techniques or new concepts in the use of ADP to support intelligence analysis and production. These applications may be developed under the leadership of either the substantive com- ponent, or OCS depending upon the nature of the application and the resources required to do the job. 10. We are impressed with the need to emphasize the early and complete immersion of those individuals who do the data reduction and analysis in the design of new collection systems. We have seen the beginning of recognition of this proposition in the coordination of the RH and HX collection programs with the data processing people. Early access to the proposed format for reporting by collectors makes possible changes in the format to accommodate both data processing systems and analytical techniques which would otherwise be overlooked. Perhaps more important, early coordination makes possible the orderly design and development of the automatic and manual capabilities required to process the output of these systems once they become available. We recommend that the Agency establish as standard procedure ?in the development of new collection systems the coordination of the data collection formats with the individuals who must process and analyze the data. 11. COINS has been of almost no use to the production analyst although it represents something of an achievement in concert of community action on a collective data processing experiment. We believe that the procedures used to support and perpetuate COINS will seriously delay rather than hasten the advent of an inter-agency system. The emphasis on the development of automated files and their process- ing in a large computer network as a gual in itself is a highly questionable procedure. But it is exceeded by the notion that this process should continue until it is successful. Certain of the premises of COINS with respect to the technical achievement of time- sharing systems and of the identity and duplication of intelligence community files appear to have been seriously in error. The COINS effort seems to have Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : plA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 CH;7i1:: ? Approved FiSFRelease 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78--04723A000300020001-4 generated a life of its own. It has been an exceedingly expensive effort for the Agency, and it promises to become even more expensive should the Agency have to dedicate an entire computer system to it as additional evidence of good faith. We recommend that the Agency seek to secure an evaluation of the present COINS experiment at the earliest possible moment in an effort to provide clearer guidance for future Agency planning for partici- pation in Intelligence Community ADP activities. 12. Computer graphics, which we would define as the development of programs to transform stored digital data into meaningful spatial relationships, have been given little attention in OCS. Aside from AUTOMAP which was developed to facilitate cartographic presenta- tion, there has been little use of graphic presentation or display. We note this omission because CIA analytical reports are distinguished by their liberal and effective use of graphic presentation to augment text or data. We recommend that increased attention be given by OCS, in close cooperation with NPIC and ORD, to the development of a strong computer graphics capability for support of analyst use of the time-sharing system. INFORMATION HANDLING 13. There are in the Agency a considerable number of specialized information centers. This requires the user to be a specialist or to use the services of a specialist to search and understand the resources of such a center. Moreover, ?these collections frequently are not known to analysts. We believe that these collections would be more effectively exploited if a central directory of them were maintained. We recommend that: (a) the Central Reference Service create a personnel-area-subject directory of other organized collections of information in the Agency. This directory should include both personal and organizational collections Approved For Release 2000/901A-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 ku, Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP7804723A000300020001-4 SECRET of information and authorization points for control of access to the respective collections. (b) the Central Reference Service be the point of contact for any general request for intel- ligence information from outside the Agency or from within where there is no known point where the informa- tion is available. (o) only those data which are generated and accessioned by CRS be provided as a direct response and that all other data be sought from the appropriate center. . It is also recommended that: (a) the present concept of CRS indexing be continued, and a systematic effort undertaken to encourage indexing input from the substantive analyst. (b) the Central Reference Service seek as a general objective a standardized document reference number which can be put on the intelligence information document before it is disseminated. This reference number should be capable of being generated and included in the format of any automated dissemination system, and should become a part of that system as quickly as possible. 14. CRS is presently conducting an experiment with a General Electric processor (GESCAN -- earlier called RSM) which will execute high speed search on machine-readable text. There has been a great deal of analyst interest in this processor for searching large bodies of machine readable text. The device is attractive initially because it can be used essentially in an interactive mode. While it is slow in comparison with interactive search of direct access files, it is the only available method for interactive search of unformatted text files. We recommend that the Agency continue to experiment with a Limited number of applications in which documents are stored and searched retrospectively in an electronic full text format. Approved For Release 2009/01522.3.,CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 a...L.4 Approved FO7Release2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78104723A000300020001-4 SECRET 15. We believe a concerted effort should be made to convert AEGIS into an on-line system. CRS should work closely with OCS to achieve a data base design and a query language which can be used throughout the Agency for the exploitation of large, content oriented files. We recommend that an extensive interactive (man - machine - data base) capability with the Central Reference Services intelligence document index be developed and tested as quickly as feasible. This is one of the few large data bases in which there is potentially wide interest, frequent use and a require- ment for precise, quick responses. 16. CRS is presently introducing a limited system for automatic dissemination of documents received in machine readable form. Preliminary findings indicate that an operational system is practical and may be cost effective. We believe that the system may also help to improve document indexing. We recommend that the experimental work under way on an automated dissemination system be maintained and each distribution point be urged to cooperate with CRS in providing "dictionary" terms for the system. We also recommend that planning for under- taking an extension of the automated dissemination system to all State, Defense and Agency positive intel- ligence information received in machine language be undertaken coincident with the beginning of feasibility testing of the present experimental system. ' COMPUTER CENTER OPERATIONS 17. The Office of Computer Services was organized to operate: (1) a general computer processing center for the Agency as a whole and (2) to provide personnel with computer programming and computer applications design experience to assist analytical and operational components in the development of computer assisted solutions to their work. -8- Approved For Release 2000Vra CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 .. v) 1.. Approved For Release2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 CRET 18. While considerable uncertainty has developed among ADP users as the result of rapid technological change, some seems to be the result of premature announcements of changes in OCS plans. Frequently the user has no opportunity to participate in the decision. He must rework his computer applications to accommodate such changes with no benefit to him. We recommend that OCS develop a mechanism for communicating plans for major computer system changes to user components and of eliciting their viewpoints. 19. Customers who have operational computer applications tend to be pleased with the service they receive from OCS. Everyone would like his work done more quickly but there are few customers who think the attention their processing requests received is less than satisfactory. The most frequent complaint expressed by customers has been their inability to maintain the job control language and the reference calls in their programs sufficiently current to assure that they would run on any occasion without interven- tion by the OCS production control or technical programming staff. 20. The present OCS Procedures Manual does not present a complete set of procedures for the programmer in the user organization to assure satisfactory prepara- tion and operational readiness of his program. Either this manual should provide more complete information on the Job Control Language (JCL) needed, or someone should be furnished full time in OCS/Operations who can prepare JCL for anything that may be brought in to run. If the JCL procedures manual were in the Inter- active Services System, the procedures would be available continuously. We recommend that a complete set of procedures be available to assure that a job can be written and run without intervention from OCS programmers. -9- Approved For Release 200A/00Mi:plA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 - Approved FeThelease 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP7004723A000300020001-4 SECRET ADP MANAGEMENT 21. We believe that more effective control of Agency ADP activities is needed. There should be more complete, clear and formal documentation of computer processing proposals and applications. There needs to be both an initial and a continuing systematic review by directorate management, and a centralized review of large projects and projects which impact on more than one directorate. We recommend that a central technical manage- ment review of major ADP projects be created under the present umbrella of Executive Director-Comptroller responsibility for Agency ADP management and that a full-time position of ADP Advisor to the Executive Director-Comptroller be created for an experienced ADP professional whose responsibility it would be to: (a) advise the Executive Director-Comptroller on all professional/technical matters relating to ADP; (b) be chairman of the IPB and the director of its permanent staff; (c) review the various local plans, provide technical input to the IPB and, periodically, develop a statement of long-term ADP objectives for the Agency; (d) assure that computer application design proposals 'are given adequate review by a central technical review panel; (e) prepare Agency-wide ADP technical standards; (f) serve as chairman of the Agency-wide ADP Career Service Board; and (g) serve as focal point for internal leader- ship and for external relations in ADP technical/professional matters. We also recommend that the Director/OCS be an ex officio participant on the Information Processing Board and that the DD/ST be represented on the Board -10- Approved For Release 2000/9,5123, piA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 K;r1 Approved ForRelease2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET by an individual who reflects the computer user popula- tion of the whole Directorate. 22. With the rise of complex computer systems to which the user is offered easy remote access, large hardware, programming and communications expendi- tures are required to provide the speed and reliability necessary to such systems. Large processors provide economies of scale not achievable with smaller systems. We recommend that the Agency establish a policy which provides a high degree of centralization in data processing activity in the Office of Computer Services, but which permits the acquisition of small or medium computer processors by other offices where there is a demonstrable economy in using a stand-alone computer system. 23. We believe that data processing facilities will be more effectively utilized if the user were required to bear the costs of ADP services. We recommend that a means of pricing data processing services performed by computer centers be developed, and that each user component be required to budget for its data processing services in essentially the same way that property funds are handled. 24. We believe that ADP management would be strengthened and made more efficient if some genuine Agency-level effort were undertaken to coordinate and direct those activities which have multi-office, multi- directorate impact. We recommend that the Information Processing Board provide for: (a) a more definitive statement of Agency ADP objectives by regular revision and publication of the Agency ADP Plan; (b) the definition and publication of Agency- wide ADP technical standards beyond the present work on nationwide (USASI) standards; and, -13 Approved.For Release 2000/05p,iii DP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For ReMese 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET (e) minimum standards for control over data entry, data base documentation and file maintenance for any ADP application serving more than one component (defined as a unit under the first-line supervisor). 25. Finally ADP career development and training should be strengthened. We recommend: (a) an Agency ADP Career Service; (b) ADP training programs with additional emphasis on the role of the user in an on-line and/or real-time computer environment; and, (c) more widespread development of office level training in the use of ADP in intelligence production and information processing. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT 26. We believe that ADP research and development activities should be transferred to OCS. OCS not only has the technical expertise necessary, but, more importantly, has a better acquaintance with user requirements arising from its operational responsibility for ADP processing. We recommend that the DD/S&T review the present division of effort between ORD and OCS in the area of information processing research and development against an alternative allocation of functional and effort which would provide for: (a) the transfer of the responsibility for computer application design and development effort from ORD to OCS; (b) the transfer of appropriate computer processing equipment from ORD to OCS; -12- Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 QZ:fi-v")177 Approved Fr Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78=04723A000300020001-4 SECRET (c) subsequent ADP equpment Or software test and analysis to be conducted by OCS except where the items are a direct adjunct of a special processing center such as NPIC; and, (d) OCS to issue a current publication to announce new activities, new products, and new develop- ments which its research and development component considers of general interest for Agency components engaged in information processing. In addition we recommend that the DD/S&T and the Information Processing Board reject the proposal of the R&D Subcommittee of the USIB Information Handling Committee for a community-wide R&D center on the basis that the recent experience with COINS and the IPRD which we believe demonstrate both the difficulty of an inte- grated community activity and the impracticality of performing research and development divorced from both computer operating centers and ADP users. Finally we recommend that research and development projects or programs in the area of informa- tion processing be submitted to the same scrutiny as required for regular ADP projects. -13- Approved For Release 2000/epp./(23,1A-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Approved For TRANSMITTAL SLIP Rekme-- DATE 3 ikov 1970 ::: ;?- TO: DDS/IPC - -- ?_4 i i 4 i I ROOM NO. 710 BUILDING Magazine REMARKS: FROM: DDI/IPC, ROOM NO. BUILDING 2E2_4_ a Meese EXTENSION 5873 zo0i)/05)423 gIA-RDP7 -03AW ICH MAY BE USED. 0300020001-4 25X1A 300020001-4 unrsr Approved For Release 2000/05/14VOIA-RDP78-04723A00030002AW4lfa Briefing Outline re ASPIN Organization and Management Recommendations . I. As a general policy the Agency 'should promote a high degree of centralization in data processing activities. The focus to he on OCS. 2. All major ADP systems proposals be reviewed on the Agency level by a full time ADP professional who will serve as Chairman of the IP Board and principal ADP Adviser to the Executive Director- Comptroller. 3. Create a permanent staff for the IP Board to provide Agency level review of systems proposalS in terms of Agency goals and objectives, Agency ADP plans, and Agency technical and procedural standards which are to be developed. Staff to be chaired by the ADP Adviser to the Executive Director-Comptroller. 4. Appoint a DD/S&T representative to the IP Board who will reflect theuser population of the Directorate; the D/OCS lhould be designated an tes. officio participant in IP Board proceedings. 5. Create an ADP Career Service. 6. Develop a comprehensive cost-accounting system for data processing services. Components to budget for data processing services and pay for these services by the transfer of funds. 7. Review of existing ADP training programs to foster increasing. . involvement of substantive, non-ADP professionals. Computer Applications in Support of Intelligence Production J. IP Board should look. to the private sector for commercially. available general data ma.nagemeut systems which will handle a wide range of Agency applications in a more economical and timely manner. (Reference to Agency tendency to develop overly elaborate specialized systems which are not compatible or standardized.) Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 7. 4' Approved For Release 2000105/23 CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 2. IP Board should look for ways to improve communication between the ADP technician and the substantive analyst who are involved in the development of an ADP application. 3. Develop means to ensure that the Agency keep abreast of new ADP techniques and concepts that may be applicable to the production of intelligence. ? 4. COINS be evaluated soonest to help Agency planning for participation in Community ADP activities. OCS Activities 1. OCS plans for changes in major computer systems be coordinated with user components"before submission to the IP Board for review. 2. OCS personnel (applications programmers) be formally assigned to the production component which is sponsoring the application effort, and their work controlled by the host production office. (Rotation back to OCS would be negotiated upon completion of task.) 3. Increased attention be given to the development of a strong computer graphics capability. 4. OCS to plan for the acquisition of a proprietary general data management system; this effort to be coordinated with the major users of OCS services as well as with NPIC and CRS. (This recommendation also recognizes that certain unique applications may require unique computer systems.) 5. OCS to provide a single on-line service to all the intelligence production components at Headquarters. Approved For Release 2000/05/23_ ,CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/2410A:RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Central Reference System l, CRS to expand its capability to service internal and external requests for intelligence information in CIA. (Community Information Services Center concept. Each agency develop such a center as point of contact for all other agencies.) 2. CRS to continue work on an automated thssemination system initially for COMINT and plan to extend this eventually to State and other non-Agency traffic. 3. CRS Document Index'should be developed for on-line, interactive use by substantive analysts. 4. Although the present method of document storage and retrieval is acceptable, the Agency should continue to experiment with improve- ments for compatibility with the speed of an on-line document index S ystem. Research and Development in Information Prot essiLig 1. Transfer the responsibility for research and development in information processing from ORD to OCS: this developmental responsibility to include problem definition and computer application and design. 2. Transfer standard computer processing equipment from ORD to OCS to support OCS's expanded R/D effort. 3. ORD contracts to be reviewed by the IP Board to determine which should be continued and under whose management. 4.. Testing and analysis of developmental ADP equipment and software should be conducted by OCS except whete they are in support of a special processing center like NPIC. (NPIC would procure and test their own systems.) 5. RID projects or programs in the area of information processing should be subjected to the same Agency-level evaluation as other ADP projects, 6. OCS to publish a periodic report on its RID activities for Agency-w consumption. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -3- Appro 25X1A Appro SENDER WILL CHECK CLASSIFICATION TOP AND BOTTOM ed For fittlietffifFEKI00105/R3aCkANEMR18-01/122MaNC OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP TO NAME AND ADDRESS DATE INITIALS 1 DD /S IPC 2 3 4 5 6 ACTION DIRECT REPLY PREPARE REPLY APPROVAL DISPATCH RECOMMENDATION COMMENT FILE RETURN CONCURRENCE X INFORMATION SIGNATURE Remarks: Fur wat.ver tap it may be to you, attached is a summary elected ASPIN recommendation* which was prepared in 0/PPS for our own use. We beli,4v, th- summary to be faithful to tiv, original paper, but la havr not verified tbis with Sweeny. FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER FROM: NAME. ADDRESS AND PHONE NO. DATE 6E 702, IA ? 6194 11 0 /ACI iFcit1WWWW20010105/23011?1131ANIK9978 728040031 FORM NO. 237 Use previous editions 1-67 (40) 0020001-4 0020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A00030&600c-14 j v SECREI 15 OCT 1970 MEMO airman, Information Processing Board SUBJECT : ASPIN 1. Attached is a long memorandum quoting recommendations extracted from the ASPIN Report and my comments about each of them. Neither the comments nor the ASPIN Report have been circulated or coordinated amoOg the Support Offices. A copy of the comments has been made available to the Deputy Director for Support but there has not been time for him to review them. 2. You will note that I have offered a. comment about nearly every recommendation in tjhe report. I find this regrettable. You will also note that the comments are not always constructive in the sense that they do not offer alternative proposals or suggest means of accomplishing the objectives of the individual recommendations. This is also regrettable but I see no reasonable alternative. Too many of them require separate additional study and staffing before they can be implemented or acted upon. Too many others are inter- related or interdependent requiring that they be considered in some series of aggregates, but the report leaves the development and considerations of the aggregates entirely up to the individual reader. Very few readers will have the time or the inclination to give the report that much study. This seems to suggest that the first recommendation to be considered is the one which would establish a full-time information processing capability at the level of the Executive Director-Comptroller. 25X1A Chief, Support Services staff DDS/SSS/RHW:hrf (13 October 1970) Distribution: Orig. & 1-Addressee 1-SSS Subject 71K:71 1-SSS Chrono mmek RET ApproveAer44141964 .)2dtlik/A. : CIA-RDP78-04723A00030002-0u01-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET .15 OW- 19,0 MEMORAND R: Chairman, Information Processing Board SUBJECT ASPIN Report You have asked the Information Processing Coordinators to comment about the ASPIN Report. Part II 18720 "Ho. 57. The Agency establish as standard procedure in the development of new collection systems, the coordination of the data collection and data forwarding formats with the individuals who must perform the data reduction and analysis of the data should the collection system become operational." COMMENT: Coordination with interested Support Components, particularly where there are space or communications requirements, should not be overlooked in the development of any procedures. This should be accomplished, of course, in the normal course of events but it doesn't always happen. The Technical Facilities Committee is available to facilitate this process and a requirement that it be used should be incorporated in coordination procedures. New collection systems inevitably produce new products which, no matter what form they take, are records and must be considered as such. Some of the records eventually become archives. Records management considerations should be taken into account from the inception of the projects so that retention plans, disposal schedules, etc. can be developed. No. 58. The Information Processing Board assure the acquisi- tion, development and use of one or more general data management systema which are sufficiently close to the general design require- ments for Agency data processing applications to permit their adapta- tion and use for a wide range of data processing applications and data ptncessing centers...." 44,44* Approve SECRET litiRiliallehtide/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A00 ,gmatmomere".....-..emaihrram Excluded from Woulatic dawcgradlng and Approved For Release2000r/21bC?IA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 L'o -2- CO This, and several other recommendations throughout the report, suggest action by the Information Processing Board which the Board is ill-prepared or ill-equipped to take, depending upon what is meant by "assure the acquisition, development, and use". The Board is not equipped to do analyses of the design requirements of data processing application in enough depth to permit a reasonable evaluation of their suitability for general use in all data processing centers. In any case, I don't believe the Board should attempt to set itself up in a way which would permit it to look as closely over the shoulders of the several computer centers in the Agency as would be required to produce the assurance recommended. The Board has no reasonable alternative but to rely upon the technical expertise in the several computer organizations to communicate with each other. Prescription of a policy that cooperation and coordination will be practiced carries no guarantee that it will be done. What the Board can do within its present competence to assure that coordination and cooperation take place must be pretty much limited to some sort of monitoring and pre- sumable that will, as a matter of practicality, come down to the acceptance by the Board of the assurances of the several computer centers that they are in fact coordinating and cooperating with each other. There comes a point when good Agency management means simply reliance upon the management competence of subordinate echelons. "No. 59. The Information Processing Board assure that the present capability for development of a unique program to process an application is maintained, so that any application whose objective is clearly unobtainable by incorporation into a general data management system may continue to be developed...." comma: Again, I don't know what the Board can do to ensure that they have this assurance. The normal demand for service is probably all that is necessary to ensure that this type of capability is maintained. There should, however, be some way to avoid designs of "unique" appli- cations being forced into some particular shape to permit their being serviced by generalized software systems when separate software would be preferable. But, again, this is more a concern of the individual customer in his relationships with the computer center than it is a matter with which Agency level management should be concerned. Perhaps taipi Approved F SECRET i. rui - ti elease 2000/05/23: CIA-R0P78-04723A0003 w 3-02:natit dawrIzr31:ng agd dniaroikv iiii? Approved For Release 2001ffirCIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 II C. I I: -3- there should be some expression of Agency policy which the Directorates can implement which will protect the customer from having his applica- tion distorted to fit a generalized software system when specialized programs would serve the requirements better. "No. 60. The Information Processing Board and its Technical Panel be charged with creating the means for the development of meaningful communications between the systems analysts-programmer and the substantive analyst who may be engaged in the common development of a computer application. Have them assure that the requisite training is given to accelerate the reduction of communication barriers which still exist." COMMENT: This is a 'audible objective but it is difficult to see what contribution the Board can make toward its achievement. The problem is more than a problem of communication; it is a problem of attitude and it may be that only the passage of time will correct it. If there is some identifiable direction which can be taken, it would seem more appropriate that it be taken at the Directorate level or subordinate echelons. The Support Directorate would be happy to have any assis- tance it can get and will take advantage of any guidance that may be available to help improve communication between substantive people and computer people. We have not yet been successful in identifying what "requisite training" can be given to reduce communication barriers and influence attitudes. "No. 61. The Agency provide time and professional and clerical assistance to a few talented individuals each year to explore, develop, and test essentially new techniques for new concepts in the use of ADP to support intelligence analysis and production. These applications may be developed under the leadership of either the substantive com- ponent, or OCS, depending upon the nature of the application and the resources to do the job." COMMENT: This recommendation requires elaboration. There is some impli- cation here of a "think-tank" concept Which would make it possible for people to be relieved of their normil duties for a year to experiment. Raving the applications developed under the leadership of OCS for the substantive component seems to imply an expectation that the recommen- ao 0 0 ??? oN FT g Ind Approve? FtelPsi 2.W00/05/23 : CIA-RDP75L134723A/ Ise ;:t.III J rom simigift 1-4 Approved For Release 2000/?MCIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -4- dation contained elsewhere in the ASPIN Report to abolish ORD has already been accepted. Presumably this recommendation means that the Agency should create an atmosphere, or establish a policy, which would permit the kind of activity recommended to occur. The Agency can't provide time. Time has to be made available in terms of the time of individual participants and this can only be done by their parent components. This raises the question of practicality. I have no problem with the concept but it will require considerable elaboration and refinement of the definition of what is meant before much of anything can be done about providing a mechanism for its accomplish- ment. In any case, if it is to be an Agency concept, then it should be truly Agency and not limited to intelligence analysis and production. Talented experimentation and exploration can be applied to moat of the things in the ADP world which are of interest to the Support Directorate. I realize that the recommendation may have been stated in this way in keeping with the scope of the ASPIN study but if we are going to deal with the recommendations in an Agency context, then this recommendation is one which should be so considered. "No. 62. The Information Processing Board assure that the present effort to provide a general time-sharing capability in OCS to serve the interests of the Agency as a whole be strengthened to provide not only on-line but also remote batch processing and remote lob entry via terminals distributed so as to make them convenient to users throughout the intelligence production components." COMMENT: Again, the scope of the recommendation seems to be intended to conform to the scope of the study. If the Information Processing Board is to interest itself in the manner in which OCS provides service to its customers, then the Board should be interested in the manner in which that service is provided to all OCS customers. The implication of the recommendation is that only OCS will have a general time-sharing capa- bility and, therefore, the Board need only to look over the OCS shoulder and not concern iteelf with what occurs in the other computer centers of the Agency. In any case, the question of how the Board, with its present resources, can provide itself with the assurance recommended; haw it can provide that assurance within the present management-hierarchical- structural relationship between the Board, OCS, and the other computer centers, and whether it should concern itself with these matters will fl1 dGjET Za004.11.0) Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A00 M.. luded tram 6uit:LI?. townzradind and dteldtsilitation Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SELht I- -5- have to be examined with some greater care. Even though the arguments used to support a single general time-sharing capability in OCS to serve the interests of the Agency as a whole may seem so persuasive that we evidence an inclination to accept them, we should not act upon that inclination until all ramifications of how, who, and whether have been carefully considered, 63. The Information Processing Board, in consultation with the interested parties, assure that the OCS interactive services system provides a general data management system capable of providing an on- line, quick response capability for large information storage and retrieval of the type characterized by the MISTAC, AEGIS, QUIKTRAK, data bases. We believe that the present and foreseeable rates of use for these files in an on-line environment are not high enough to warrant economic use of individual processers to support them." COMMENT: The comment addressed to No. 62 immediately above also applies here. I am in no positive to comment about the technical practica- bility of this recommendation but I would not like to see it inter- pretated or acted upon in any way which would divert or dilute the effort to move ahead with the 'CIMS system. The search for a data management system that can be all things to all people could very easily mean that we become perpetual searchers while nothing gets done for anybody. "No, 64. The agency seek to secure an evaluation of the present COINS experiment at the earliest possible moment in an effort to pro- vide clearer guidauce for future Agency planning for participation in intelligence community ADP activities." COMMENT: I suspect that events will have overtaken this recommendation before it can be acted upon. To comment upon it in this context will make no coestructive contribution. akaocp-0-14.4 ?' ttVIET ;an adic.:aatii doper:0'57,11:1g arA detRusiticati,In Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -6- "No. 65. The Information Processing Board define the minimum standards of control over data entry, data base documentation and file management for any ADP application serving more than one component (defined as a unit under the first-line supervisor)." COMMENT: I have the same problem with this recommendation that I have with several of the others. I don't feel confident that I really under- stand what it means; if I do understand it, I don't see how the Board can do it; and I don't see how the Board is going to monitor all ADP applications to ensure that it has been done. SUMMARY COMMENT: The sum of the recommendations in this section would seem to impose upon the Information Processing Board a responsibility for the direct-line management of the Office of Computer Services, and pre- sumably the other computer centers, which the Board has neither the time, technical competence, or staff support to fulfill even if a management role for the Board were considered to be desirable. Per- formance of the functions recommended seem to go beyond the proper role of a Boacd, certainly they do go beyond the role of the Informa- tion Processing Board as it is presently defined. There is even the implication of a rather fundamental change in the ADP management philosophy of the Agency. This is not to imply that a change would necessarily be wrong or bad. It is to say, however, that these recommendations cannot and should not be acted upon individually with- out a very careful assessment of their total effect and a thoughtfully drawn plan for their aggregate management. a a e SECRET 1).kIiUiJiJ Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 iExcluded tram aulorlatid downgrading and daciasattication, Approved For Release 2000/05/23: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECREI -7-- Part III - Office o Computer Services (OCS) Activities Pages III. 12-13 "No. 30. We recommend that: OCS develop in consultation with the information Processing Board a mechanism for communicating plans for major computer systems changes to user components and of eliciting and reviewing user iaput to these plans before they are ready for sub- mission to the Iuformation Processing Board for review antecedent to approval by the Executive Director-Comptroller." COMMENT: We will need to have a careful definition of what is meant by "major computer systems changes' before we can act on this recommen- dation. Assuming that it means such changes as the installation of GIMS or CP/CMS, ttva.n I would agree that coordination and the furnishing of complete information to users is desirable. On the other hand, not all users will have the technical competence to respond intelligently to a request for concurrence with such proposed thanges. The same applies to review by the Information Processing Board and approval by the Executive Director-Comptroller. I assume it is this void that the recommendation seeks to fill, but communication requires understanding as well as being told. What the Board or the Executive Director can do in a practical sense to ensure that OCS customers, or the Board itself, uuderstand proposed Changes, or how the Board could do it doesn't come readily to mind. OCS has the responsibility for satisfying the requirements of its customers. There has to be some point where we are willing to allow them to do that. Again, the same standards as apply to OCS should apply to other computer centers. "No. 31. A complete set of procedures be published and maintained which provide enough information to assure that a job can be written (including JCC) and run without intervention from OCS programmers." COMENT: am not sure I understand the implications of this recommenda- tion or how it relates to the recommendation immediately following re- garding the assignment of OCS personnel to user components. This recom- mendation would have to be interpreted in the light of actions taken to- ward the implementation of the other recommendations. In any case, who is going to develop and maintain such a set of procedures? Why, again, is attention focused only on OCS programmers? Approved For Release's-2000105M Exolud:3 fro dur-AdlIZ downgrading and deolassilication A-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -8- "No. 32. Application programmers (this would presumably in- clude a major share of the Applications Division's personnel) from OCS should be assigned to and, where feasible, located with analysts in the production organization for whom they are designing and programming. Their work during their period of assignment should be controlled by the host production organization except that their rotation back to internal OCS assignment should be negotiated with OCS." COMMENT: This recommendation relates directly to Recommendation No. 30, Chapter VI which says that an Agency ADP career service should be created. If the recommendation that an Agency career service be es- tablished is adopted presumably the applicatiol\ts programmers currently employed in the CRS, NPIC, and RID computer centers would be a part of it. This would mean that they would be subject to assignment in and out and among the several computer centers as well as user components throughout the Agency. In one case assignments would be negotiated with OCS; in other cases assignments would presumably be negotiated with the computer centers concerned by the Chairman of the Agency- Wide ADP Career Service Board, who would be the Chairman of the Information Processing Board. Assignments from as well as to the computer centers and the user components would have to be negotiated. While I concur with the concept I believe these recommendations are intended to espouse, it is unfortunate that they cannot be acted upon as stated. I believe the Information Processing Board should pursue the idea of an Agency career service for data processing personnel and the assignment of applications programmers, and perhaps other computer specialists, to the components whose systems require computer programming and systems support. We should create a special study group, or task force, which would devote its full time to the development of a detailed personnel management system concept and a mechanism which would permit its implementation. Alternatively we should assign the task to one person and make it possible for him to have all of the access and assistance he needs to get the job done. "No. 33. Increased attention should be given by OCS, in close cooperation with NPIC/AID and ORD/AN, to the development of a strong computer graphics capability for support of analyst use of the time- sharing system...." nommummaaawsweassIrnownolfa.1.10 GROUP 1 Excluded from automatic 'aft 04) SECRET declassilitmian downgrading and Approved For Re AO oiO4/AllCIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2009/9,1421,34 CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 StMit I -9- COMMENT: This recommendation seems to endorse the solution to problems which have not yet been adequately defined, or are not adequately defined in this report at any rate. What and how extensive is the analyst's requirement for computer graphics support? I find it curious that so many of the recommendations suggest that the Information Processing Board should give increased attention or seek the assurance that particular actions are taken while in this case the recommendation is addressed to specific organizational com- ponents in different directorates. Admittedly, the Information Pro- cessing Board as presently structured is in no better position to take action on this recommendation than it is on any of the others but in the interest of consistency, at least, it would seem that the objec- tive sought to be obtained by this recommendation would be more appropriately addressed at the Agency rather than subordinate levels. While we are at it, the use of computer graphics for the reporting of management information might also be profitably explored. "No, 34, Present planning for OCS to acquire and test a pro- prietary general data management system should be encouraged. Plans for this acquisition should be moved forward as rapidly as a careful coordination of the proposal can be concluded.... The objectives in acquirinz general data management software ought to be (1) to move toward as wide a coverage of our major processing activities within any given system as is intellectually and operationally acceptable, (2) to establish each system selected as an Agency standard for the type(a) of application identified, and (3) to recognize that there will still exist computer applications which will require unique programs." COMMENT: This recommendation apparently is a modification of duplica- tion of 11-58. Action is already under way to accomplish the intent of this recommendation in the consideration being given to the GIMS package. The acquisition of this package with the modifications under considera- tion is of vital importance to the SIPS Program. I agree that the Agency should take maximum advantage of whatever versatility this package has to offer and that reasonable modifications should be made SECRET GOV 1 Excluded trom automatic downgrading and 8A(Pilgted For R?lek46-124t9/016/1/P: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4' Approved For Release 2003/EEREICIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 to extend its utility to other users in addition to SIPS. The decision of whether or not to acquire the GIMS package should not, however, be conditional upon its adaptability to all of the require- ments which may be surfaced for general data management systems. We should avoid encumbrances which might cause these systems to sink of their own weight. We should also avoid shaping our production and information processing systems to fit software packages and thereby distort the purposes the information processing systems themselves are intended to serve. We should acquire software packages to serve the maximum number of requirements; we should not alter the require- ments simply for the purpose of acquiring a minimum number of software packages. "No. 35. A single, integrated, interactive services system to provide on-line service for intelligence production components at Headquarters should be the Agency near-term objective." COMNSNI: The recommendation clearly is couched in terms reflective of the scope of the ASPIN study. If it is to be interpreted in an Agency context, it is open to the inference that a separate interactive services system will be provided to meet requirements of Support Information Processing Systems and other systems which do not fit within the constraints of the phrase "intelligence production components at Headquarters". The security concerns of sharing interactive services among community and Agency proprietary systems suggest that separate interactive services systems may not be such a bad idea. Clearly the intent of the recommendation is to consolidate resources and avoid the development of interactive services systems in every computer center of the Agency. I agree with that intent but to accept the language of the recommendation literally would be much too constrained, even as a near-term objective. I may not understand all of the nuances, but I'm not sure this recommendation is entirely consistent with 11-58, and 111-34. ii,Eq.ETI Approved For Reets'e 20001/0g/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A0 fra atlionatic dowagrad'a 4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 StREi -11- Part IV - A Central Reference System Pages IV. 11-12 "No. 35. We recommend that: the Central Reference Service be established as the point of contact for any general request for intelligence information from outside the Agency or from within where there is no immediate known point where the information needed is available." NO COMMENT "No. 36. Only those data which are generated and accessioned by tre Reference Center be provided as a direct response by the Center and that all other data are sought first from another center in the Agency which may have resources to respond." NO COMMENT "No. 37. Work underway on an automated dissemination system should be maintained and each distribution point to be employed in the initial system test should be directed to cooperate with CRS in pro- viding earefully constructed 'dictionary' terms to try to guide this system. The work should be recognized as experimental at this atage, but it should be widely encouraged for its long-term prospects." COMMENT: See No. 38 immediately below. 'do. 38. Planning for undertaking an extension of the automated dissemination syatem from SI input to all State, Defense and Agency positive intelligence information received in machine language should be undertaken coincident with the beginning of feasibility testing.' GOMNT: Members of the Information Processing Board have heard separate briefings about the automated diesemination system being developed by CRS and the automated communications terminal (ACT) being developed by the Cable Secretary and the Office of Communications. It is possible to come away from these briefings satisfied that they each serve the purposes of their separate systems which makes it legitimate for them to be developed and exist independently. Nevertheless, one has the ? A961-gOed ForkA ste g"-':('CIA-RDP78-04723A00 CROUP I Excluded frem surenva downgrzeing and declassiticaliell I III III -4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET. -12- nagging suspicion that their independence is more a reflection of organizational structure than it is a functional distinction. briefing no matter how complete or competently staged, are not adequate to per- mit judgements to be made about whether one or the other of these systems could serve both interests, or each should exist in its own environment. Unfortunately the Information Processing Board does not have at its disposal resources necessary to investigate situations of this kind in enough depth with disinterested objectivity to present the Information Processing Board or the Executive Director-Comptroller with the analytical detail necessary to permit judgements to be made. Such a capability is needed if the Board is to perform adequately even the limited role which has presently been carved out for it. Meanwhile, perhaps yet another study group needs to be launched to review the total communications, dissemination, ADP structure to provide a com- prehensive picture of the system and develop possible approaches to its improvement. "No. 39. The present concept of CRS indexing should be con- tinued, and a systematic effort taken to facilitate indexing input from the substantive analyst and to encourage such input to the system." COMMENT: See below. "No. 40. The Central Reference Service should seek as a general objective a standarized document reference number which can be put on the intelligence information document before it is disseminated. This reference number should be capable of being generated and included in the format of any automated dissemination system, and should become a part of that system as quickly as possible. It should be made an Agency standard immediately and expanded into a community standard eventually." COMMENT: See below. No. 41. The concept and scope of document indexing by a reference center should be developed by a top management decision. Established at a lower level, it results either in extensive duplica- tion effort or in abaadonement of control over the use of intelligence documentation. Document index processing has, however, been customized by each processing organization which supports an individual or organization reference activity." COMMENT: See below. ArdiftekdiitiFor Rele s SECRET edoilth dIA-RDP78-04723A000300 51Vii? Ea:du:ten tr-3:1 lomat( dangriaing and aclanincalian Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET, -13- "No. 42. The Central Reference Service should create a personnel-area-subject index to other organized collections of infor- mation in the Agency. This index should include both personnel and organizational collections of information and authorization points for control of access to the respective collections. This index is an important and complex system which must be carefully defined, coordinated and implemented. CRS should be assigned responsibility for design and development of the system but they must have the full cooperation of all other offices and directorates. Development of such a system would pose an excellent test of the Information Pro- cessing Board." COMMENT: See blow. "Ne. 43. The present method of document storage and retrieval is acceptable and should be maintained. It provides speed when it is genuinely needed and is far more economical than any system of electronic storage or video storage that we have encountered. We believe that the Agency should continue to experiment with a limited number of applications in which documents are created, stored, and searched retrospectively in an electronic format, because development of an on-line document index will almost certainly require a simultaneous improvement in the speed of delivery of documents." COMMENT: See below. "No. 44. An extensive interactive (man-machine-data base) capability with the Central Reference Service intelligence document Index should be developed and tested as quickly as feasible. This is one of the few large data bases in which we think there is both wide interest and frequent use. Indeed we are told by analysts that the principle limitation on their use of the system is its slow response time." COMMENT: I have no competence which would permit me to comment about recommendations 39 through 44 in the context of the systems to which they are addressed. Documents are records, however, which eventually will become inactive and some significant fraction of them will require storage in the Records Center. Many of them, presumably, will be worthy of permanent retention and should be identified for archival storage and preservation. While indexing and retrieval systems should not necessarily be designed specifically with long-term storage and retrieval from a remote location as constraints upon the systems, the notion of long-term retention and disposal schedules as well as the requirement for manual retrieval from a remote location should be kept AppI,ed F8r Releaseklakil/d4:giRDP78-04723A 1-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/EFERDP78-04723A000300020001-4 !IL 11 -14- in mind. Systems which permit storage in other than hard copy form are of vital interest to the Records Management Programs of the Agency. SECRET irep If04 ove- tFor Reltakekt00/t1Zg2t: IA-RDP78-04723A00 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -15-- Part V - Research and Development (R&D) in Information 'rocessinii Pages V. 5-6 "No. 14. We recommend that the DDS&T review the division of effort between ORD and OCS in the area of information processing research and development against an alternative allocation of function and effort which would: a. Provide for the subsequent problem definition and computer application design and development effort to be moved from ORD to OCS. b. Provide for the transfer of essentially standard computer processing equipment from ORD to OCS and for OCS to provide a level of experimental or developmental computer processing time necessary to support the expanded experimental function out- lined above. We would for example urge that pro- cessing time might be made available on machines appropriate to the work involved rather than on a single machine which is used only for experimental work. c. Provide for the transfer of other equipment from the IPRD Laboratory to those surviving or antici- pated development programs which may use it most effectively, the rest to be transferred to surplus. d. Provide Seer a review of existing ORD contracts through the Information Processing Board and adiected prospective users to determine which of those contracts should be continued and under whose leadership they should proceed. e. Provide that subsequent ADP equipment or software test end analysis be conducted by OCS except where the items are a direct adjunct of a special pro- cessing center such as SPIC. The special unit would procure and test the latter product. ti ti 1.E:NET flu lutniati kifiv a downsrading and dadas3ilicAion Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : RIAI-FW/8-04723A000300020001-4 =in! -16- f. Provide for UCS to issue a current awareness pub- lication similar to its present Tech Notes to announce new activities, new products, and new developments which its research and development componeat considers of gOneral interest for Agency components engaged in information processing. COMUNT: None. "No. 15. In addition we recommend that the DDSST and the Information Processing Board reject the proposal of the R&D Sub- committee of the USIB Information Handling Committee which proposes a community-wide R&D Center on the basis of the recent experience with COINS and the 'PRO which we believe demonstrated both the difficulty of an integrated community activity and the impracticality of performing research and development on non-existent or badly defined requirements." COMMENT: Concur. "No. 16. Finally we recommend that research and development projects or programs in the area of information processing be submitted to the same scrutiny as that proposed for ADP projects in the section below dealing with management." COMMENT: Concur subject to the comments offered about the recommendations dealing with management. ICRETI 01'0(1 q1,43 8141001110 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A00030 GHOU? 1 Excluded tram automatic daRegrading and Approved For Release 20a./p53[ CIA-RDF713-04723A000300020001-4 -17- Part VI - Organizational and Management Elements of Automatic Data Processing Page VI, 10-11 "No. 26. We recommend that: the Agency reassert a policy of providing a high degree of centralization in data processing activity in the Office of Computer Services, that this policy be tempered by- permitting the acquisition of small or medium computer procesaers by functional organizations where there is a demonstrable-computational economy in using a stand-alone computer system, and that this policy continue the present emphasis on the functional component (user) responsibility for problem definition and problem solution. In short, we recommend that computer organizations develop the systems necessary to run the computers and run them, and that functional production people prepare the data and the processing steps required for its transformation by computer." COMMENT: I see no particular need for a reassertion of this policy from the Support Directorate point of view. We have no particular problem with the intent of the recommendation, on the other hand, as long as the Office of Computer Services is able to retain the capability to satisfy thdi requirements that we musy levy upon it. If the other recommendations of the ASPIN Report are to be taken seriously, however something more than a simple reassertion of policy is required. At this point in my review of the ASPIN study I am not able to identify what that "something more" is. Someone has to find a way of looking at the ASPIN recommenda- tions in the aggregate. Too many of them are inter-related and inter- dependent to permit prudent action to be taken on any of them separately. 11.58, 11.63, 111.34, 111.35, and perhaps others should be considered together; 11.59, 111.31, 111.32, V.14, V.16, V1.27, V1.30, perhaps 11.64, and possibly others should be considered together; conceivably 1V.37 and 1V.38 should be included in the latter group as well. I haven't re-examined the recommendations as carefully as I should to assert positively that this suggested grouping of them should hold. This is a part of the difficulty. The ASPIN study requires too much study. Not many of us are going to be able to give it as much study as it requires. I have already spent more time on it than I feel it should have required and I am still uneasy about it because my comments deal with individual recommendations and they might change in the aggregate if I were to take the time to consider the recommendations that way. ILITOOIJ likki DO Approved For Release 2000/05# -,atl kgat asitamatk 1 dmingrading tad .g4-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 dadts00411 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 tle.-fiNf78-04723A000300020001-4 -18- "No. 27. A central technical management review of major ADP projects be created under the present umbrella of Executive Director- Comptroller responsibility for Agency ADP management, that a full-time position of ADP advisor to the Executive Director-Comptroller be created for an experienced ADP professional whose responsibility would be to: a. Advise the Executive Director-Comptroller on all professional/technical matters relating to ADP; b. Be Chairman of the IP Board and the Director of its permanent staff; c. Review the various local plans, provide technical input and, periodically, develop a statement of long-term ADP objectives for the Agency; d. Assign computer application design proposals to the 'suitable functional/technical review components; Prepare. Agency-wide ADP technical standards; ,Serve as Chairman of the Agency-wide ADP Career Service Board; Serve as focal point for internal leadership and for external relations in ADP/professional matters." COMMENT: It is interesting that the notion of permanent staff is buried as a subordinate clause in paragraph b. above and that it is considered to be a permanent staff of the Information Processing Board. I realize that this was written before the nonemclature in OPPB changed to eliminate the term "Information Processing Staff" and leave the IP&E Team to perform something of a dual role, but even before that change was made the Information Processing Staff was considered to be an OPPB unit rather than a supporting arm of the Information Processing Board. I have some difficulty conceptually with the idea of the IPSE Team performing a dual role but that concern is not directly germane to discussion of this ASPIN recommendation. What is germane is the opinion that the responsibilities identified for the ADP advisor are more than a full-time job for one man, and probably more than a part-- time job for the ME Team. It is also my opinion that fulfillment .of the responsibilities prescribed calls for a role going far beyond ViaWilof advisor. 814,bibti Approved For Release 200 -3.- k-tIA-RDP78-04723A0 Approved For Release 2000/0612CabsTRDF78-04723A000300020001-4 -19- The responsibilities suggested for the ADP advisor taken to- gether with the functions recommended throughout the report to be performed by the Information Processing Board clearly suggest the need for an Information Processing Staff at the level of the Executive Director-Comptroller. Moreover, membership on the Board will become a full-time task for each of the Directorates representa- tives. Essentially I agree *hat there needs to be a small staff competence at the Agency level. Its role will have to be carefully drawn in terms of specific functions listed here and the more general functions suggested elsewhere in the report as tasks for the IPB. wonder whether any of the recommendations ean be acted upon until after this one has been dealt with. "No. 28. Existing Central ADP planning be strengthened to provide: a. For a more definitive outline of Agency objectives to be achieved in related or overlapping office plans and for regular revision and publication of the Agency ADP Plan; b. For the definition and publication of Agency-wide ADP technical standards beyond the present work on nationwide (USASI) standards; For a standard format and procedure for the proposal and review of major requests for the acquisition of computer systems or of computer processing applica- tions." COMMENT The idea of ADP planning in its own separate context has always been bothersome to me. ADP exists only to serve operational and management programs and planning for it should be carried out in the context of the programs it serves. We haven't found a way of doing that satisfactorily, but we haven't really tried. The Information grocessing and Exploitation (IP&E) Program Category does not serve the .purpose. Support information peocessing is split among the Communications Program Category, the Program Wide Category, and the 8V0000if Approved .For Release '2 SECRET downgrading art IMP:ocIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001 - declassification Approved For Release 2008/EtalCIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -20- IP&E Program Category. It only gets into the latter because the Office of Computer Services is included in that category and OCS provides computer support to the Support Directorate. We don't plan in CIA and we don't program, not really. We budget. We should plan and we s ould program but we should not delude ourselves into thiniting we are/doing something that we are not simply because we apply the terminology. We do not have an Agency ADP plan and we have never had one. The only visible objective we have had at the Agency level has been to control the growth of hardware. We need something a great deal better than that but it will take a great deal more time and a great deal more thought than anyone has yet been able to give it. Perhaps what we need as a start is a plan for a plan, but even that won't occur if it is left as a part-time effort of one or several people who have 4ozens of other things to do. We do need a definitive statement of Agency objectives. Standard formats for the proposal and review of major requests for computer services may be useful tools but what we really need are some criteria for judging the content of proposals. The memorandum the Executive Director-Comptroller addressed to the Deputy Directors in October 1969 said that decisions to use ADP equipment should be based on a review of proposals in terms of utility, benefits, life expectancy, and relationship to other activities. It identified several bench marks for the review of proposals and it identified responsibilities to be Charged to Directorate Information Processing Coordinators and the Information Processing Board. Nothing has been done in an Agency context toward the implementation of the provisions of that memorandum. We don't know to what extent individual direc- torates may have taken independent action toward its implementation within their own juriedictions but the kinds of things which come before the Information Processing Board suggest that there may be some inconsistencies or differences in the approaches taken by eabh of the Directorates. We need some way of assuring that it is neither easier nor more difficult in one directorate than another to get approval of an ADP project and that the same criteria of importance, utility, benefits, etc. are applied in all of the Directorates. When we have these things, then we can develop formats and procedures to ensure their expeditious processing. votrooltiv1) = I Approved For Release 20 RET '6F,JUe Exauded Ira mink downgrading and declassification 06713 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020 Approved For Release 2000g151.2a ? CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 LuKt. -21- "No. 29. A means of pricing data processing services performed by computer centers be developed, and that each user component be required to budget for its data processing services and transfer the funds to pay for thesis services in essentially the same way that pro- perty funds are handled." comENT: I have commented about proposals for costing data processing services in a separate context and will not belabor the point further here, except to say that I agree we should have some way of knowing what particular computer applications cost for consideration as a factor in considering whether the application should go forward or not. Before we dash madly into an elaborate pricing system we should have clearly in mind what we hope it will achieve. I do not believe that an elaborate system which would require the transfer of funds should be the objective, and while we can certainly learn something from the experience of the PRA (Property Requisitioning Authority) system I doubt very much that we will find it a useful pattern to be followed. "No. 30. An Agency ADP career service be created." COMMENT: See earlier comment, Part III, Recommendation No. 32. "No. 31. Existing ADP training programs introduce, additional emphasis on the Changing responsibility or role of the user in an on-line and/or real-time computer environment, and that functional organizations review the need for unit training of personnel in the use of quantitative and/or logical techniques in indigenous analytical problems." COMMENT: Concur, but first we need some agreement among the Directorates about what the role of the user should be. "No. 32. The Director/OCS be an ex officio participant on the Information Processing Board and that the DDSligT should be represented on the Board by an individual who reflects the computer user population of the whole Directorate. The presence of the Director/OCS on the Board is imperative, but we believe he should participate in his capacity as director of computer processing rather than as the representative of a directorate with large processing requirements." SECL AtisemyRd iFor Releas8 3010106/2J3 1 ....k-0.u,ca ,rom 503Mail Vc;vagradin,"; and declassVic? 1,:ii %pb-RDP78-04723A000300020?5oi-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -22- COMMENT: The Information Processing Board has already addressed this recommendation. 25X1A MIM Chief, Support Services StaI DDS/SSS/RHW:hrf (14 October 1970) Dlastribution: Orig. 45,, 1-Addressee 1-SSS Subject 1-SSS Chrono .ECRET Excluded kcal On* cai:v 1 downgrading and f3 j Approved For Release orrA 8li-RDP78-04723A00030002:00117:117 11100 CI 00 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDF'78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET, .15 OCT WO MEMORANDUM FOR: Chairman, Information Processing Board SUBJECT ASPIN Report You have asked the Information Processing Coordinators to comment about the ASPIN Report. Part II,, 18-20 "No. 57. The Agency establish as standard procedure in the development of new collection systems, the coordination of the data collection and data forwarding formats with the individuals who must perform the data reduction and analysis of the data should the collection system become operational." COMMENT: Coordination with interested Support Components, particularly where there are space or communications requirements, should not be overlooked in the development of any procedures. This should be accomplished, of course, in the normal course of events but it doesn't always happen. The Technical Facilities Committee is available to facilitate this process and a requirement that it be used should be incorporated in coordination procedures. New collection systems inevitably produce new products which, no matter what form they take, are records and must be considered as such. Some of the records eventually become archives. Records management considerations should be taken into account from the inception of the projects so that retention plans, disposal schedules, etc. can be developed. No. 58. The Information Processing Board assure the acquisi- tion, development end use of one or more general data management systems which are sufficiently close to the general design require- ments for Agency data processing applications to permit their adapta- tion and use for a wide range of data processing applications and data pxecessing centers...." SECRET Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A0 ww.e ixcluded from avoniatic dungrndIng and ; "1:'i 1-4 11,57 11,58 111,34 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that the Agency establish as standard procedure in the development of new collection systems the coordination of the data collection formats with the individuals who must process and analyze the data. II. 57. While there have been serious lapses in the past in rnel,,Ing analysis with collection, these are disappearing. For example, OEL's Program Review Board considers the analysis problem for each new collection system, and OSP has its own set of management tools toward this end. USIB community forums have also been established where such interfaces can be discussed. OCS feels that from its standpoint, computer users are becoming more generally aware of the need to make their requirements known at the earliest possible date. In any case, this is an OCS problem with its users. No fiat will produce the cooperation that can be gained by good relations with them. We recommend that the Information Processing Board assure the acquisition, development and use of general data management systems which are sufficiently close to the general design requirements for Agency data processing applications to permit their adaptation and use for a wide range of data processing applications and data processing centers. The acquisition of such systems should be coordinated with the major users of OCS and with each of the components who have their own data processing centers, i.e., NPIC and CRS. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 200MEEIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -2- COMMENT: This, and several other recommendations throughout the report, suggest action by the Information Processing Board which the Board is ill-prepared or ill-equipped to take, depending upon what is meant by "assure the acquisition, development, and use". The Board is not equipped to do analyses of the design requirements of data processing application in enough depth to permit a reasonable evaluation of their suitability for general use in all data processing centers. In any case, I don't believe the Board should attempt to set itself up in a way which would permit it to look as closely over the shoulders of the several computer centers in the Agency as would be required to produce the assurance recommended. The Board has no reasonable alternative but to rely upon the technical expertise in the several computer organizations to communicate with each other. Prescription of a policy that cooperation and coordination will be practiced carries no guarantee that it will be done. What the Board can do within its present competence to assure that coordination and cooperation take place must be pretty much limited to some sort of monitoring and pre- sumable that will, as a matter of practicality, come down to the acceptance by the Board of the assurances of the several computer centers that they are in fact coordinating and cooperating with each other. There comes a point when good Agency management means simply reliance' upon the management competence of subordinate echelons. "No. 59. The Information Processing Board assure that the present capability for development of a unique program to process an application is maintained, so that any application whose objective is clearly unobtainable by incorporation into a general data management system may continue to be developed...." COMMENT: Again, I don't know what the Board can do to ensure that they have this assurance. The normal demand for service is probably all that is necessary to ensure that this type of capability is maintained. There should, however, be some way to avoid designs of "unique" appli- cations being forced into some particular shape to permit their being serviced by generalized software systems when separate software would be preferable. But, again, this is more a concern of the individual customer in his relationships with the computer center than it is a matter with which Agency level management should be concerned. Perhaps SECRET Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000 ? !"' :403matie an.n...3-.1J;ng ahd 9P? pD Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 II. 58. There does not seem to be any magic to the acquisition of general data management systems from commercial vendors as opposed to in-house development which assures that the former is the best route to go. Such developments depend on the requirement that we are trying to meet, what is available in the market place, and our capabilities for building the system. What is important is that the Board insist on the review of commercially available systems when in-house development efforts are proposed. The acquisition of GIMS and AEGIS presumably follow this ASPIN recommendation. 11,59 We recommend that the Information Processing Board assure that the capability for development of unique computer programs be maintained for applications whose objectives are clearly unattainable by incorpora- tion into a general data management system. II. 59. The purpose of the recommendation seems to be to counter- balance the previous one. Obviously big systems software is expensive but equally obviously one big system is not likely to solve everyone's problems. Hurrah for motherhood. ..V Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/MRA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 L -3- there should be some expression of Agency policy which the Directorates' can implement which will protect the customer from having his applica- tion distorted to fit a generalized software system when specialized programs would serve the requirements better. "No. 60. The Information Processing Board and its Technical Panel be charged with creating the means for the development of meaningful communications between the systems analysts-programmer and the substantive analyst who may be engaged in the common development of a computer application. Nave them assure that the requisite training is given to accelerate the reduction of communication barrierEe which still exist." COMMENT: This is a laudible objective but it is difficult to see what contribution the Board can make toward its achievement. The problem is more than a problem of communication; it is a problem of attitude and it may be that only the passage of time will correct it. If there is some identifiable direction which can be taken, it would neem more appropriate that it be taken at the Directorate level or subordinate echelons. The Support Directorate would be happy to have any assis- tance it can get and will take advantage of any guidance that may be available to help improve communication between substantive people and computer people. We have not yet been successful it identifying what "requisite training" can be given to reduce communication barriers and influence attitudes. "No. 61. The Agency provide tine and professional and clerical assistance to a few talented individuals each year to explore, develop, and test essentially new techniques for new concepts in the use of ADP. to support intelligence analysis and production. These applications may be developed under the leadership of either the substantive com- ponent, or OCS, depending upon the nature of the application and the - resources to do the job." COMMENT: This recommendation requires elaboration. There is some impli- cation here of a "think-tank" concept which would make it possible for people to be relieved of their normal duties for a year to experiment. Having the applications developed under the leadership of OCS for the substantive component seems to imply an expectation that the recommen- -7FT Approved For Release 2000105/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723 ,r0;:l 241,11, ift 4 a3tia?1-3.idi A:La 30u40 01 -4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 11,60 We recommend that the Information Processing Board (IPB) create the means for the deVelopment of meaningful communications between the systems analyst- programmer and the substantive analyst engaged in the common development of a computer application. PD 11,61' 4adbio IV 7, II. 60. The Information Processing Board can't by itself bring users and processers together. Both Centers and users must work out better ways of understanding each other. Centers need to be more user- oriented. and test essentially new techniques or new concepts in the use of ADP to support intelligence analysis and production. These applications may be developed under the leadership of either the substantive com- ponent, or OCS depending upon the nature of the application and the resources required to do the job. We also recommend that the Agency provide time as well as professional and clerical assistance to a few talented individuals each year to explore, develop, II. 61. Agree. Providing special support to talented computer/user p teams would also help further II. 60. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000SEIMECIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -4- dation contained elsewhere in the ASPIN Report to abolish ORD has already been accepted. Presumably this recommendation means that the Agency should create an atmosphere, or establish a policy, which would permit the kind of activity recommended to occur. The Agency can't provide time. Time has to be made available, in terms of the time of individual participants and this can only be done by their parent components. This raises the .question of practicality. I have no problem with the concept but it will require considerable elaboration and refinement of the definition of what is meant before much of anything can be done about providing a mechanism for its accomplish- ment. In any case, if it is to be an Agency concept, then it should' be truly Agency and not limited to intelligence analysis and production. Talented experimentation and exploration can be applied to most of the things in the ADP world which are of interest to the Support Directorate. I realize that the recommendation may have been stated in this way in keeping with the scope of the ASPIN study but if we are going to deal with the recommendations in an Agency, context, then this recommendation is one which should be GO considered. "No. 62. The Information Processing Board assure that the present effort.to provide a general time-sharing capability in ()CS to serve the inter(:ste of the Agency as a whole be strengthened to provide not only . on-line but also remote batch processing and remote job entry via terminals distributed so as to make them convenient to users throughout the intelligence production components." Again, the scope of the recommendation seems to be intended to conform to the scope of the study. If the Information Procesaing Board is to interest itself in the manner in which OCS provides service to its customers, then the Board should be interested in the manner in which that service is provided to all OCS customers. The implication of the recommendation is that only OCS will have a general time-sharing capa- bility and, therefore, the doard need only to look over the OCS shoulder and not concern itself with what occurs in the other computer centers of the, Agency. In any case, the question of how the Board, with its present resources, can provide itself with the assurance recommended; how it can provide that assurance within the present management-hierarchical- structural relationship between the Board, OCS, and the other computer centers, and whether it should concern itself with these matters will SECRET Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A0 ? Excluded trim downzrading and .declassitientlen Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that the Information Processing Board assure that the present effort to provide a general time-sharing capability in OCS to serve the interest of the Agency as a whole be strengthened to provide not only on-line but also remote batch process- ing and remote job entry via terminals distributed so as to make them convenient to users throughout the intelligence production components. S11 1 II. 62. OCS intends to provide the widest time-sharing capabilities PJ)-. consistent with its budget. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SEL:ht - ,nt -5- have to be examined with some greater care. Even though the arguments used to support a single general time-sharing capability in OC S to serve the interests of the Agency as a whole may seem so persuasive. that we evidence an inclination to accept them, we should not act upon that inclination until all ramifications of how, who, and whether have been carefully considered. "No. 63. The Information erocessing Board, in consultation with the interested parties, assure that the OCS interactive services system provides a general data management system capable of providing an on- line, quick response capability for large information storage and ' retrieval of the type characterized by the MISTAC, AEGIS, QUIKTRAK, data bases. We believe that the present and foreseeable rates of use for these files in. an on-line environment are not high enough to warrant economic use of individual processers to support them." CO'ea4ENT: The comment addressed to No. 62 immediately above also applies here. I am in no position to comment about the technical practica- bility of this recommendation but I would not like to see it inter- pretated or acted upon in any way which would divert or dilute the effort to move ahead with the GleiS system. The search for a data management system that can be all thins to all people could vary easily mean that we become perpetual searchers while nothing gets done for anybody. "No. 64. The agency seek to secure an evaluation of the present COINS experiment at the earliest possible moment in an effort to pro- vide clearer guidance for future Agency planning for participation in intelligence community ADP activities." COMMLNT: I suspect that events will have overtaken this recommendation before it can be acted upon. To comment upon it in this context will make no constructive contribution. Approved For Release 20g ;ftk Tcl nwn;:j.3av, and ! AzliDEIt'iW23A000300020001-4 II ,63 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that the Information Processing Board, in consultation with the interested parties, assure that the OCS Interactive Services include a general data management system capable of providing quick response capability for large information storage and retrieval activities of the type characterized by the MISTAC, AEGIS, and QUIKTRAK data bases. II. 63. Agree. There should be a long-term goal to provide on-line / facilities for MISTAC, AEGIS, and QUIKTRAK. At present, neither the capacity nor the facilities for such a system exist. 11,64 We recommend that the Agency seek to secure an evaluation of the present COINS experiment at the earliest possible moment in an effort to provide clearer guidance for future Agency planning for partici- pation in Intelligence Community ADP activities. --r II. 64. Agree. The Agency should review the COINS experience l7Min detail. Appaved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -6- "No. 65. The Information Processing Board define the minimum standards of control over data entry, data base documentation and file management for any ADP application serving more than one component (defined as a unit under the first-line supervisor)." COMMENT: I have the same problem with this recommendation that I have with several of the others. I don't feel confident that I really under- stand what it means; if I do understand it, I don't see how the Board' can do it; and I don't see how the Board is going to monitor all ADP applications to ensure that it has been done. SUMMARY COMMENT: The sum of the recommendations in this section would seem to impose upon the Information Processing Board a responsibility for the direct-line management of the Office of Computer Services, and pre- sumably the other computer centers, which the Board has neither the time, technical competence, or staff support to fulfill even if a management role for the Board were considered to be desirable. Per- formance of the functions recommended seem to go beyond the proper role of a Board, certainly they do go beyond the role of the Informa- tion Processing Board as it is presently defined. There is even the implication of a rather fundamental change in the ADP management philosophy of the Agency. This is not to imply that a change Would necessarily be wrong or bad. It is to say, however, that these recommendations cannot and should not be acted upon individually with- out a very careful assessment of their total effect and a thoughtfully drawn plan for their aggregate management. SECRET FacrduEdi(w30[=tic -.Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723400 _Wprading I SS 1-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 11,65. A',1( (e) minimum standards for control over data entry, data base documentation and file maintenance for any ADP application serving more than one component (defined as a unit under the first-line supervisor). k Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved ForRelease2000/05/21 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRL1 -7- Part III - Office of CmIputer Services OCSLActivities Paaes III. 12-13 "No. 30. We recommend that: OCS develop in consultation with the information Processing Board a mechanism for communicating plans for major computer systems changes to user components and of eliciting and reviewing user input to these plans before they are ready for sub- mission to the Information Processing Board for review antecedent to approval by the Zxecutive Director-Comptroller." COMMENT: We will need to have a careful definition of what is meant by. "major computer systema changes" before we can sac t on this recommen- dation. Assuming that it means such changes as the installation of GINS or CP/CHS, then I would agree that coordination and the furnishina of complete information to users is desirable. On the other hand, not all users will have the technical competence to respond intelligently to a request for concurrence with such proposed changes. The name applies to review by the Information Processing Board and approval by the Executive Director-Comptroller. I assume it is thia void that the recommendation seeks to fill, but communication requires understanding as well as being told. What the Board or the Executive Director can do in a practical sense to ensure that OCS customers, or the Board ituelf, understand proposed changes, or how the Board could do it doesn't come readily to mind. OCS ha a the reaponsibility for satisfying the requirements of its customers. There has to be some point where we are willing to allow them to do that. Again, the same utaudards as apply to OCS should apply to other computer centers. "No. 31. A complete set of procedures be published and maintained which provide enough information to aasure that a job can be written (including JCC) and run without intervention from OCS programmers." COMasNT: I am not sure I understand the implications of this recommenda- tion nor how it relates to the recommendation immediately following re- garding the assignment of OCS personnel to user components. This recom- mendation would have to be interpreted in the light of actions taken to- ward the implementation of the other recommendations. In any case, who is going to develop and maintain such a set of procedures? Why, again, ia attention focused only on OCS programmers? iIi5m a3wr.graaing? and ? d2tiaRsiliL2ilan Approved For Release 2040/0411gt: CIA-RDP78-04723A0001002000174 111,30 PP-541 'zo. 111,31 P Approved For Release 2000/05/23: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that OCS develop a mechanism for communicating plans for major computer system changes to user components and of eliciting their viewpoints. III. 30, Agree. OCS should keep its user better informed of equip- ment changes. Also needed is a better means for communicating user requirements for ADP services to OCS in advance of OCS planning activities. As it is now worded, the recommendation implies that OCS should plan first and then ask for user input. We recommend that a complete set of procedures be available to assure that a job can be written and run without intervention from OCS programmers. III. 31. Agree generally. However, a complete set of programming procedures will not assure that a job can be written and then run without intervention from OCS programmers. OCS has the continuing goal of improving system documentation and procedures so that programmers have a better chance. of having their job run without intervention. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2?TA/Et: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -8- "No. 32. Application programmers (this would presumably in- ? elude a major share of the Applications Division's personnel) from OCS should be assigned to and, where feasible, located with analysts in the production organization for whom they are designing and programming. Their work during their period of assignment should be controlled by the host production organization except that their rotation back to internal OCS assignment should be negotiated with OCS." COMMENT: This recommendation relates directly to Recommendation Na. 30, Chapter VI which says that an Agency ADP career service should be created. If the recoMmendcation that an Agency career service be es- tablished is adopted presumably the applications programmers currently employed in the CRS, NPIC, and RID computer centers would be a part of it. This would mean that they would be subject to assignment in and out and among the several computer centers as well as user components throughout the Agency. In one case assignments would be negotiated with OCS; in other cases assignments would presumably be negotiated with the computer centers concerned by the Chairman of the Agency- Wide ADP Career Service Board, who would be the Chairman of the Information Processing Board. Assignments from as well as to the computer centers and the user components would have to be negotiated. While I concur with the concept I believe these recommendations are intended to espouse, it is unfortunate that they cannot be acted upon as stated. I believe the Information Processing Board should pursue the idea of an Agency career service for data processing personnel and the assignment of applications programmers, and perhaps other computer specialists, to the components whose systems require computer programming and systems support. We should create a special study group, or task force, which would devote its full time to the development of a detailed personnel management system concept and a mechanism which would permit its implementation. Alternatively we should assign the task to one person and make it possible for him to have all of the access and assistance he needs to get the JO done. "No. 33. Increased attention should be given by OCS, in close cooperation with NPIC/AID and ORD/AN, to the development of a strong computer graphics capability for support of analyst use of the time- sharing system...." SECRET I----YMNFT?* , Excluded from automatic downuading and . dINNIniIN:01:in ? IIIMMR?0?1?1?1?MMIG.1?1?11...m.....1.1???????1 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 p0' III, 33 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that applications programmers (this would presumably include a major share of the applica- tions divisions' personnel) from OCS be assigned to and, where feasible, colocated with analysts in the produc- tion organization for whom they are designing and programming. Their work during their period of assign- ment should be controlled by the host production organization. III. 32. OCS is now detailing systems specialists to help users communicate with OCS programmers and systems analysts. We do not intend this kind of support to include "a major share of the applications divisions' personnel" since this would unduly fractionate scarce OCS resources. Where smaller numbers of people are involved, where adequate professional, mature guidance can be obtained from the produc- tion analyst, and where specific projects can be delineated, OCS will follow this recommendation. We recommend that increased attention be given by OCS, in close cooperation with NPIC and ORD, to the development of a strong computer graphics capability for support of analyst use of the time-sharing system. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 20 COMMENT: -9- CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Thie recommendation seems to endorse the solution to problems which have not yet been adequately defined, or are not adequately defined in this report at any rate. What and how extensive is the analyst's requirement for computer graphics support? I find it curious that eo many of the recommendations auggest that the Information Processing Board should give increased attention or seek the assurance that particular actions are taken while in this case the recommendation is addresaed to specific organizational com- ponents in different directoratee. Admittedly, the Information Pro- cessing Board as presently etructured is in no better position to take action on this recommendation than it is on any of the others but in the interest of-consistency, at least, it would seem that the objec- tive sought to be obtained by thie recommendation would be more appropriately addressed at the Agency rather than subordinate levels. While we are at it, the use of computer graphics for the reporting of .management information might also be profitably explored. No. 34. Present planning for OC S to acquire and test a pro- prietary general data 'management system should be encouraged. Plans for this acquisition should be moved forward as rapidly as a careful coordination of the proposal can be concluded.... The objectives in acquiring general data management software ought to be (1) to move toward as wide a coverage of our major processing activities within any given system as is intellectually and operationally acceptable, (2) to establish each system aelected an an Agency standard for the type(a) of application identified, and (3) to recognize that there will still exist computer applications which will require unique programs." COMMENT: This recommendation apparently is a modification of duplica- tion of 11-53. Action is already under way to accompliah the iatent of this recommendation in the conaideration being given to the MOS package. The acquisition of this package with the modifications under considera- tion is of vital importance to the SIPS Program. I agree that the Agency should take maximum advantage of whatever versatility this package has to offer and that reaeonable modifications should be made GLOW I SECRET Excluded from auromatit downgrading and dectaslinOm unr.0.114?1011???119,111010.1 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 III. 33. Agree. We recognize the growing interest in graphics and 4 C on-line capabilities of all kinds. A considerable amount of OCS development i2P* effort is going into such requirements. 11,58 111,34 001 We recommend that the Information Processing Board assure the acquisition, development and use of general data management systems which are sufficiently close to the general design requirements for Agency data processing applications to permit their adaptation and use for a wide range of data processing applications and data processing centers. The acquisition of such systems should be coordinated with the major users of OCS and with each of the components who have their own data processing centers, i.e., plc and CRS. III. 34. Agree; the recommendation, in essence, will be accomplished with the procurement of GIMS. OCS, per se, does not see the need for special authority to establish each system it selects as an Agency standard. Most users are reasonable people and will accept any standard system that will meet their needs. a% ? Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 213EREFf : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -10- to extend its utility to other users in addition to SIPS. The decision of whether or not to acquire the CIMS package should not, however, be conditional upon its adaptability to all of the require- ments which may be surfaced for general data management systems. We should avoid encumbrances which might cause these systems to sink of their own weight. We should also avoid shaping our production and information processing systems to fit software packages and thereby distort the purposes the information processing systems themselves are intended to serve. We should acquire software packages to serve the maximum number of requirements; we should not alter the require- ments simply for the purpose of acquiring a minimum number of software packages. No. 35. A single, integrated, interactive services system to provide on-line service for intelligence production components at ileadquarters should be the Agency near-term objective." COMILNT: The recommendation clearly is couched in terms reflective of the scope of the ASPIN study. If it is to be interpreted in an Agency context, it is open tu the inference that a separate interactive services system will be provided to meet requirements of Support Information Processing Systems and other systems which do not fit within the constraints of the phrase "intelligence production components at Headquarters". The security concerns of sharing interactive services among community and Agency proprietary systems suggest that separate interactive services systems may not be such a bad idea. Clearly the intent of the recommendation is to consolidate resources and avoid the development of interactive services systems in every computer center of the Agency. I agree with that intent but to accept the language of the recommendation literally Would be much too constrained, even as a near-term objective. may not understand all of the nuances, but I'm not sure this recommendation is entirely consistent with 11-58, and 111-34. i?ECRET ,i..,cmcied tam wonatIc I Approved For For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000Wiittib III , 35 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend a single, integrated, interactive system to serve intelligence production components at headquarters. III. 35. The recommendation is not clear. Is it suggesting that the OCS interactive system be moved to the DDI? Is it suggesting that OCS set up one system exclusively for intelligence production components and others presumably for intelligence collectors (OSP, OEL, OSA) and support components? We don't feel that systems in OCS should be dedicated to a type of user such as "intelligence production components". Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 L.tJ1C I; -11- Part. IV Central Referencestem pAy&ILIV. 11-12 "No. 35. We recommend that: the Central Reference Service be established as the point of contact for any general request for intelligence information from outside the Agency or from within where there is no immediate known point where the information needed is available." NO COMMENT "No. 36. Only those data which are generated and accessioned by the Reference Center be provided as a direct response by the Center and that all other data are sought first from another center in the Agency which may have resources to respond." NO CO'frDIENT "No. 37. Work underway on an automated dissemination system should be maintained and each distribution point to be employed in the initial system test should be directed to cooperate with CRS in pro- viding carefully constructed 'dictionary terms to try to guide this system. The work should be recognized as experimental at this stage, but it should be widely encouraged for its long-term prospects." COMMA;NT: See No. 38 immediately below. "No. 38. Planning for undertaking an extension of the automated dissemination system from Si input to all State, Defense and Agency positive intelligence information received in machine language should be undertaken coincident with the beginning of feasibility testing." GOMMLNT: Members of the Information Processing Board have heard separate loiefings about the automated dissemination system being developed by CRS and the automated communications terminal (ACT) being developed by the Cable Secretary and the Office of Communications. It is possible to come away from these briefings satisfied that they each serve the purposes of their separate systems which makes it legitimate for them to be developed and exist independently. Nevertheless, one has the Approved For Release 20 r......... ."--, Cli?JV 1 1 EKCIuti,.?d Ii6m atocciath.. ?C down2iallirig ami 1 13. " CIA-RDP78-04723A00 . Atib.144 117.,35 4, Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 (b) the Central Reference Service be the point of contact for any general request for intel- ligence information from outside the Agency or from . within where there is no known point where the informa- tion is available. (c) only those data which are generated IV,36 and accessioned by CRS be provided as a direct response siZi5-(15,06and that all other data be sought from the appropriate center. IV,37 IV,38 We recommend that the experimental work under way on an automated dissemination system be maintained and each distribution point be urged to cooperate with CRS in providing "dictionary" terms for the system. We also recommend that planning for under- taking an extension of the automated dissemination system to all State, Defense and Agency positive intel- ligence information received in machine language be undertaken coincident with the beginning of feasibility testing of the present experimental system. IV. 37. Agree. Work on automated dissemination should be continued. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved ForRelease2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET. -12- nagging suspicion that their independence is more a reflection of organizational structure than it is a functional distinction. Briefings, no matter how complete or competently staged, are not adequate to per- mit judgements to be made about whether one or the other of these systems could serve both interests, or each should exist in its own environment. Unfortunately the Information Processing Board does not have at its disposal resources necesaary to investigate situations of this kind in enough depth with disinterested objectivity to present the Information Processing Board or the executive Director-Comptroller with the analytical detail necessary to permit judgements to be made. Such a capability is needed if the Board is to perform adequately even the limited role which has presently been carved out for it. Meanwhile, perhaps yet another study group needs to be launched to review the total communications, dissemination, ADP structure to provide a com- prehensive picture of the system and develop possible approaches to its improvement. 39. The present concept of us indexing should be con- tinued, and a systematic effort taken, to facilitate indexing input from the substantive analyst and to encourage such input to the system." COMIeNT: See below. "No. 40. The Central Reference Service should seek as a general . objective a standarized document reference number which can be put on the intelligence information document before it is disseminated. This reference number should be capable of being generated and included in the format of any automated dissemination system, and should become a part of that system as quickly as possible. It should be made an Agency standard immediately and expanded into a community standard eventually." COMMLNT: See below. "No. 41. The concept and scope of document indexing by a reference center should be developed by a top management decision. Established at a lower level, it results either in extensive duplica- tion effort or in abandonement of control over the use of intelligence documentation. Document index processing has, however, been customized by each processing organization which supports an individual or organization reference activity." COMeNT: See below. . SECRFT ? Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-0472an rtIn ? 3A000300 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 It is also recommended that: TV,39(a) the present concept of CRS indexing be . . .3_(01/0conti-nued, and a systematic effort undertaken to " I encourage indexing input from the substantive analyst. IV,40 (b) the Central Reference Service seek as a 1.3 general objective a standardized document reference itiaz zs-3-639.number which can be put on the intelligence information 7 document before it is disseminated. This reference number should be capable of being generated and included in the format of any automated dissemination system, and should become a part of that system as quickly as possible. IV. 40. Agree. Standardization of document reference numbers is a useful goal. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET No. 42 4.2. The Central Reference Service should create a personnel-area-subject index to other organized collections of infor- mation in the Agency. This index should include both personnel and organizational collections of information and authorization points for control of access to the respective collections, This index is an important aud complex system which mast be carefully defined, coordinated and implemented, CRS should be assigned responsibility for desi?,n and development of the system but they must have the full cooperation of all other offices and directorates. Development of such &system would pope an excellent test of the Information Pro- cessing Board." COMMENT: Sc h41ow. "No. 43. The present method of document storage and retrieval is acceptable and should be maintained. It provides speed when it L, genuinely needed and is far more economical than any system ol electronic storage or video storap:e that we have encountered. We beliave that the Agency should continue to experiment with a limited number of applications in which documents are created, stored, end searched retrospectively in an electrenie format, because development of an on-line document index will almost certainly require a simultaneous improvement in the speed of delivery of documents." COMMENT See below. 44. An extensive interactive man-machine-data base) capability with the Central Reference Service intelligence document Index should be developed and tested an quickly as feasible. This is one of the,few large. data banes in which we think there is both wide interedt 4nd frequent use, Indeed ye are told by analysts that the principle limitation on their use of the system is its slow .response time." COMIF,NTI have no competence which would pernit me to -comment about recommeudatious 39 through 44 in the context of the systems to which they are addressed. Documents arc records, however, which eventually will 'become inactive and some significant fraction of them will require storage in the Records Center. Many of them, presmnahly, will be worthy of permanent retention and. should be identified for archival storage and preservation, While indexing and retrieval systems should not necessarily bp designed specifically with long7term storage and retrieval from a remote location an constraints upon the systems, the notion of long-term retention and disposal schedules as well as the :toquirement for manua1 retrieval from a remote location should he kept ryi 0 ,? Approved For Release 2000051,23 : CIA-RDP78-0472 020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001 -4 We recommend that: IV 42 (a) the Central Reference Service create a personnel-area-subject directory of other organized /- , collections of information in the Agency. This directory ,vhould incZude both personal and organizational collections 3? IV,43 P5-i 7- IV,44 of information and authorization points for control of access to the respective collections. We recommend that the Agency continue to .experiment with a limited number of applications in which documents are stored and searched retrospectively in an electronic full text format. IV. 43. Agree. We recommend that an extensive interactive (man - machine - data base) capability with the Central Reference Services intelligence document index be developed and tested as quickly as feasible. This is one of the few large data bases in which there is potentially wide interest, frequent use and a require- ment for precise, quick responses. IV-. 44. Agree, assuming that cost figures are developed to determine which method is the most economic way of overcoming the potentially slow response time limitation of CRS on-line document index processing. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001 -4 /tic?is) Approved For Release 200nrieflA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 in mind. Systema which pemit storage in other than hard copy form are oi vital intorout to the Records Management Programs of the Agency. iu.n1:4;ft:;2 Jo,/ Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A 04001020091-4 , Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -15- .Part_112,,_Research_and:Devele=t) in Inforpation Vt_k"A No. 14, We reco:)imead that the DDS &T review the division of effort between 0130) and OCS in the ar4.;!a of inEormation prk.)cessing research and development against an alternative allocation of function s.nd. effort with would: ? Provide for the subsequent problem definition and computer application desi,gn and development effort to be moved from ORD to OCS. b. Provide for Vile transfer of essentially standard computer processing equipment from ORD to UCS and for OCS to provide a level of eparimental or developmeutal computer processing time necessary CQ support the e.:,:.panded experimental function. out- lined above. We would for example urge that pro- cosair4; time might be made available on machines appropriate to the Wo4V. involved rather than on a &dual* mac:aloe which is used only for experimental work. . Provide for the transfer of other equipment from the IVRD Laboratory to those surviving or'antici- pated developm,eut programs which may use it most effectivoly, the Mit to be transferred to surplus. d. Provide gor a review of e.1,Asting 04D contracts through the Infor,Aation ?roconoing Zoard and selected prospective users to determine which of those coutracto should be continued and under whoue leadership they should proceed. e. Vrovide that subsequent A:OP equipment or software test and analysis he conducted by OC S c-&copt Where the items are a direct adjunct of a special pro-. cessing center such as aPiC. The special unit would pvaeure and test the latter product. . ? 4 nn0 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that the DD/S&T review the present division of effort between ORD and OCS in the area of information processing research and development against an alternative allocation of functional and effort which would provide for: (a) the transfer of the responsibility for V. 14. The subject of IPRD is under management review in the PC1 DD/S&T at this time. p17-1 V,16 processing equipment from ORD to OCS; (c) subsequent ADP equipment or software test and analysis to be conducted by OCS except where the . items are a direct 'adjunct of a special processing center such as NPIC; and, (d) OCS to issue a current pUblication to announce new activities, new products, and new develop- ments which its research and development component considers of general interest for Agency components engaged in information processing. V. 15. This recommendation may represent a popular, intuitive judgment on the value of a community-wide R & D Center, but a more substantial treatment of the R & D Subcommittee's proposal is needed. Such proposals have, however, come to little in other fields in the past. we De17,eVe demonstrate oovn vne, a241.1-7,cuLty o.1- an 7-nye- grated community activity and the impracticality of performing research and development divorced from both computer operating centers and ADP users. Finally we recommend that research and development projects or programs in the area of informa- tion processing be submitted to the same scrutiny as required for regular ADP projects. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23: CW-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECA.. I -16- f. Provide for OC S to issue a current awareness pub- lication similar to its present Teen Notes to announce sew activitiea, new products, and new developments which its research and development component considers of g:neral int for Agency eomponentS eegaged in information processing. CONI-4,NT: None. "No. 15. in addition we recommend that the DDS&T and the Information Processing Board reject the proposal of the R&D Sub- -committee of the 'WAS Information aaudling Committee which proposes a community-wide R&D Center on the basis of the recent experience with COINS and the 'Rao which we believe demonstrated both the difficulty of an integrated community activity and the impracticality of performing research and development on non-existent or badly defined requirements.' COMENTz Concur. ."No. 16. Finally we recommend that research and development projects or pro8rams in 04 area of information processing be submitted. to the same scrutiny as that proposed for ADP projects in the section below dealing with management." COICEST: , Concur au ject to the comments offered about the recommendations dealing with management. Exc:lalvanatO Approved For Release 2000)05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A060:"1300i2iiilli -4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 V. 16. The question, "Why treat ADP R & D differently than other R & D?", needs to be answered. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000105/23 CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRE' Part VI - Oresnizat4oaal a d lanspement F ements Automatic Data , "No. 26. We recommend that: the Agency reassert a policy of providing a high degree of centralization In data processing activity in tha.Office of Computer Services, that this policy be tempered by permitting the acquisition of small or medium computer processera by functional organizations where there in a demonstrable-computational economy in using a stand-alone computer system, and that this policy continue the present emphasis on the functional component (user) responsibility for problem definition and problem solution. In short, we recommend that computer organizations develop the systems necessary to run the computers and run them, and that functional production people prepare the data and the processing steps required for its transformation by computer." COMMENT: I see no particular need for a reassertion of this policy from the Support Directorate point of view. We have no particular problem with the intent of the recommendation, on the other hand, as long as the Office of Computer Services is able to retain the- capability to satisfy th6 requirements tht we musy levy upon it. If the other recommendations of the ASPIN Report are to be taken seriously, however, something more than a simple reassertion of policy is required. At this point iu my review of the ASPIN study I am not able to identify what that "something more" is. omeone hes to find a way of looking at the ASPIN recommenda- tions in the aggregate, Too many of them are inter-related and inter- dependent to permit prudent action to be taken on any of them separately. 11,53, 11.63, 111034, 111?350 A'n.C1 porps others obould he co:oldoreA. toffq.11x; 11.59,J i $., V,14, V,16, VI ,27, V1.30, pers 11,64, and possibly 00:sets shoulj be coastiored together; conceivably IV.37 and 1V,33 should he included in the latter group as well. haven't re-examined the recommendations as carefully as I should to assert positively that this suggested grouping of them should hold, This is a part of the difficulty, The ASP1N study requires too much study. Not many of us are going to be able to give it as much study as it requires. I have already spent more timo on it than I feel it should have required and I am still uneasy about it because my comments deal with individual recommendations and they might change in the agsregate if I were to take the time to consider the recommendations that way. ngraN) aod Approved For Release 2000,./8Rpt CIA-RDP78-04723A00p3_ 2 011144 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that the Agency establish a policy which provides a high degree of centralisation in data processing activity in the Office of Computer Services, but which permits the acquisition of small or medium computer processors by other offices where there is a demonstrable economy in using a stand-alone computer system. VI. 26. Agree, greater centralization of data processing activities is desirable especially for standards setting, purchase of equipment, and personnel. How this is done organizationally and functionally is a matter requiring additional management discussion. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 ? CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -18- "No. 27. A centrai technical management review of major ADP projects be created under the present umbrella of Executive Director- Comptroller responsibility for Agency ADP management, that a full-time position of ADP advisor to the Executive Director-Comptroller be created for an experienced ADP professional whose responsibility would be to a. Advise the aecutive Director-Comptroller on all professional/technical matters relating to ADP; b. Be Chairman of the IP Board and the Director of its permanent staff; Review the various local plans, provide technical input and, periodically, develop a statement of , long-term ADP Objectives for the Agency; d. Assign computer application design proposals to the "suitable functional/technical review components; e. ? Prepare Agency-wide ADP technical standardn; ? i Serve as Chairman of the Agency-wide ADP Career .Service Board; g. Serve as focal point for internal leadership and for external relations in ADP/professional matters." COMENT: It is interesting that the notion of a permanent staff is buried as a subordinate clause in paragraph b. above and that it i3 considered to be a permanent staff of the Information Processing Board. I realize that this was written befre the nonemelature in OPPB changed to eliminate. the term "Information Processing Staff" and leave the ME Team to perform something of a dual role, but even before that change was made the Information Processing Staff was considered to be an OPPB unit rather than a supporting arm of the Informatiou. Processing Board. I have some difficulty conceptually with the idea of the IPE Team performing a dual role but that concern is not directly germane to discussion of this ASPIN recommendation. What is germane is the. opinion that the responsibilities identified for the ADP advisor are more thau a full-time job for one man, and probably more than a part-- time job for the IP&E Team. It is also my opinion that fulfillment of the responsibilities prescribed calls for a role going far beyond the role of advisor. Approved For Release 20001:0W(CIA-RDP78-04723A Approved For Release 2000/05/23: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 VI, 27 We recommend that a central technical manage- ment review of major ADP projects be created under the present umbrella of Executive Director-Comptroller sy responsibility for Agency ADP management and that a iir,5;,--c./!)5z, full-time position of ADP Advisor to the Executive Director-Comptroller be created for an experienced ADP ? professional whose responsibility it would be to: (a) advise the Executive Director-Comptroller on all professional/technical matters relating to ADP; (b) be chairman of the IPB and the director of its permanent staff; (ci review the various local plans, provide technical input to the IPB and, periodically, develop a statement of long-term ADP objectives for the Agency; (d) assure that computer application design proposals 'are given adequate review by a central technical review panel; ,21 VI,28.3) IV,41 24 VI,32 IV 5 (e) prepare Agency-wide AD? technical standards; (f) serve as chairman of the Agency-wide ADP Career Service Board; and (g) serve as focal point for internal leader- ship al,61 for external relations in ADP technical/professional matters. We also recommend that the Director/OCS be an ex officio participant on the Information Processing Board and that the DD/S&T be represented on the Board by an individual who reflects the computer user popula- tion of the whole Directorate. ? 4 a VL 27. Disagree strongly. The Office of the Executive Director- Comptroller is not the place for "technical management review" which is a proper function of the Directorates. Any technical advisor to the Executive Director-Comptroller should be actively engaged in the ADP business; otherwise he will lose his technical ability in short order. The job suggested is a staff one: haw can he expect to manage AEG) personnel as a staff officer even if designated as chairman of a career service -- or for that matter how could any computer center or office permit this sort, of assumption of line management by staff? The proposal of this recommendation effectively aims at the perversion of management functions and the creation of a permanent empire. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 200tlit,f1A-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 -19- The responsibilities suggested for the ADP advisor taken to- gether with the functions recomartended throughout the report to be performed by the Information Processing Board clearly suggest the need for an Information Processing Staff at the level of the Executive Director-Comptroller. Moreover, membership on the Board will become a full-time task for each of the Directorates representa- tives. Essent?aily I agree that there needs to be a small staff competence at the Agency lovel. Its role will have to be carefully drawn in terms of specilic functions listed here and the more general functions suggested elsewhere in the report as tasks for the IPB. I wonder whether any of the recommendations ean be acted upon until after this one has been dealt with. 23. Laisting Central ADP planning be strengthened to provide a. For a more definitive outline of Agency ohjecives to be achieved in related or overlapping office plans and for regular revision and publication of the Agency AD? Plan; . For the definition and publication of Agency-wi'e ADP technical standards beyond the present work on nationwide (USASI) standards; c. For a standard format and procedure for the proposal and review of major requests for the acquisition of computer system or of computer processing applica- tions." C'010.1.6NTz The idea of ADP planning Its owe separate coat at:Ixwq always been bocheioome to me. /WV e;Usts only to serve operational and management programs and planning for it sould be carried out in the context of the programs it serve*. We haven't found a way of doing that 4atisfactorily, but we havon't really tried. The Information Processing and ie:Kploitation (IP60 Program Category does not serve the purpose. 6upport information puocessing is split among the Communications Program Category, the Program Wide Category, and tbe. cr r ?..04 L Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A00030a02a0.0414 VI,28 VI 28 ;28 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend that the Information Processing Board provide for: (a) a more definitive statement of Agency ADP objectives by regular revision and publication of the Agency ADP Plan; (b) the definition and publication of Agency- wide ADP technical standards beyond the present work on-nationwide (USASI) standards; and, VI. 28. Agree. The concepts of "proposal and review" needs some "review" in itself. Why should the review of ADP equipment acquisition go beyond that for other R & D activities? Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 200,Mi-iCIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 IP&E Program Categorye it only gots into the Latter because the Office of Computer Services is included in that category and OCS provides computer support to the ,$upport Directorate. We don't plan in CIA and vs; don't program, not really. We budget. We should plan and we should program bet We should not delude ourselves into thilaing we are doing something that we are net pimply because we apply the terminology. We do not have an Agency ADP plan and we have never had one. The only visible objective we have had at the Agency level has been to control the growth of hardware. We need something a great deal bettor than that but it will tnke a great deal more time and a great deal more thought than anyone has yet been able to zive it. Perhaps what we need as a start is a plan for a plan, but even that won't occur if it is left as a part-time effort of one or several , people who have dozens, of other things to do. We do need a definitive statement of Agurtcy objectives. Standard tOmats for the proposal and review of major requests for computer services may be useful tools but what we really need are some criteria for judgin tne con 'at of proposals. The memorandum the Executive Director-Comptroller addressed to the Deputy Directors in October 1969 said that decisions to k.130 ADP equipment should be based on a review of proposals in terms of utility, benefits, life expectancy, and reiationship? to other activities. It identified several bench marks for the review of proposals and it identified responsibilities.. to be charged to Directorate Information Processing Coordinators and the information Processing Loard. Nothing has been done in an Agency context toward the implementation of the provisions of that memorandum. We don't know to what extent individual direc- torates may have taken independent action toward its implementation within their own jurdictioas but the kinds of thinga which come before the Information Proceasinz Board suggest that there nay be. vomc inconsistencies or differences in the approaches taken by es4h of the Directorates. We need 6eme way of aosurinz that it is neither easier nor more difficult in one directorate than another to get approval of An ADP project and that the name criteria of importance, utility, benefit6, etc. arca applied all of the birectorarcz.then we have 0.1esa taint*, then we can Oavaiop fomato and procedure.o to ensure their expeditious proccoGing. I ectwngrg&ii.V, AN/ 5 5 r) JNINsFiti,,41i)q Approved For Release 2000/05/23. CIA-RDP78-04723A0003000260014 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECKL "No 29 29. A moans of pricia3 data processias services performed by computer centers be developed, and that each user component be required to budget .for its data processing services and transfer the funds to pay for these services iu essentially the same way that pro- perty funds are handled." COMMJCNT: I have commented about proposals for costing data processing services in a separate context and will not.beldhor the point further here, except to say that I agree we should have some way of knowing what particular computer applications cost far conuideretion as a , factor in considering whether the application should go forward or not. Before we dash madly into an elaborate pricing system we should have clearly in mind wast we hope it will achieve. 1 de not believe .that an elaborate system which would require the transfer of funds should be the objective, and while wa ca a certainly learn something from the experience of the nA (Property Requisitioning Authority system 1 doubt very much that we will find it a useful pattern to be followed. "No. Ageacy ADP career service be created." COMW.NT: See earlier comment, Part III, Aecommeadation 13o. 32. No 31. Existing AD? training programa introduce additional emphasis oh the changing raTponsibility or role of the user in an on-line and/or real-time computer environment, and that functional organizations review the need for anit training of pereonnel in U? . of quantitative and/or logical techniques in indizenous analytical problems." COMMENT: Concur, but first we need some nfxcoment among the Directorates about what the role of the user should be. 32. Vas DirectoriuCS be an klx uf.ficio participant au tlku Information erocessing 'Award and thaL tact 1.4).;&T uhould he represented oit the Board by an individual who re.aocto the computer suer population of the whole Directorate. Tic presence of tho DitectorNeS on the kleard in imperative, but we believe he should participate in hi a capacity as director of computer processing rather than as the representative of a directorate with laro processing requirements." , 0, i4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A00030002000.14 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 We recommend 'that processing services perform developed, and that eaoh us to budget for its data proc the same way that property a means of pricing data ed by computer centers be er component be required essing services in essentially funds are handled. VI. 29. Disagree. The effect of this recommendation could be to diffuse the resources being programmed for ADP services so that they appear as a lot of line items for various user components. This .054 1-- would make for less top management control and focus on ADP expendi- tures. This seems to be the opposite effect from that which is desirccl. We should properly cost data processing services and make sure they arc reviewed regularly by the user before moving to the step of having all users budget for ADP services. If this fails, the budgeting will probably be the simplest way to force priorities on managers. pPs4--1 VI ,30 V1,31 . VI, 31 /1* pDSci-j? VI. 30. The career service matter is a low priority issue. In any case it would tend to be incestuous or cannibalistic as its members feed on them.selves without outside influence from other professions. ? - 25. Finally ADP career development and training should be strengthened. We recommend: (a) an Agency ADP Career Service; (b) ADP training programs with additional emphasis on the role of the user in an on-line and/or real-time computer environment; and, (c) more widespread development of office level training in the use of ADP in intelligence production and-information processing. VI. 31. Agree. The users' understanding of system analysis and the on-line environment needs strengthening. VI. 32. This recommendation has already been discussed by the s'.47- Chairman of the IP Board with the Director of OCS. The Director of OCS should also be Technical Advisor to the Board. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 SECRET -22- COMHENT: The Information Vrocessinz Board has already addressed this recommendatiou. .25X1A ChieX, Support Si .1)taxf DDS/SSS/RHW:hrf (14 October 1970) Wistribution: Orig. & 1-Addressee 1-SSS Subject 1-SSS Chrono ;EC 'Approved For Release 2000/05/23 C1A-RDP78-04723A i Lxcriud$4 fim 4vIviztic aavitsgROn4 5./6. (II, 5:: 7. (II, E= Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIAIRDP78-04723A000300020001-4 1.)ATIONS Improve Programmer - User Communications. Strengthen OCS Time-Sharing. Single Interactive System (OCS). - 111,34) Acquire general data management packages. to. =7 (IT -) " Acquire general data management package f:2 large files (AEGIS, etc.). Special programs for unique needs. Assign OCS Progre-23 to User components. Formal effort at ILDP innovation. Collectors to coordinate with processors and Evaluate COIITS ASAP co,:--2p-iacuxrc,nce assumed. 77:,:!ISION MATRIX DD/I*, ED I- DD/s, DD/S: DD/P*, DD/=f DD/P* DD/P*, rDP-== DD/P* - DD/P*, DD , DD/S&T DD/P*, DDJE, DD/P*, DD/S, DD/S&T ED,! DD/P*' DD/SPAT i,L/P/ =-- LD/S riPro0OCUPPFCE DD/I, DD/S, DD/S&T ii':COUCLUSIVE DD/S DD/S&T DD/S DD/S, DD/I Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 DD/S and DD/ST question means of achievement. DD/S&T opposed to lirriiting such syste-::Is to a single function (e.g., intel. rood.). DD/S concurs in principle on III, does not concur on II, 58 (IP2: as decision making fo=n on generr>1 f,ata management systems). nr,/, 1.1.)/0 questions roLe .1-7_3 in such DD/S&T and DD/S agree rrncin7e see no requireont to coordination. 12. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CONC.U1RENCE CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 .HCOIT INCONCLpSIVE (III, 33) Develop computer graphics. DD/P*, DD/I*, DD/S&T DD/S 13. (IV, 42) (IV, 35) CRS to serve as direc- tory to all CIA files. CRS point of contact for external requests. DD/P*, DD/I DD/P*, DD/I DD/S, DD/S&T DD/S, DD/S&T DD/S for IV, dld n -; T:here njr (IV, 36). CRS to service only from own files. DD/P*, DD/I* DD/S, DD/S&T (IV, 39) Continue shallow indexing in CRS; User indexing encouraged. DD/P*, DD/I* DD/S, DD/S&T (Iv, 4o) Standard document number system DD/P*, T`D/S&T, DD/I* DD/S 14. (IV, 43) Continue RSM experiment. DD/P*, DD/S&T, DD/I* DD/S DD/S dii comment en _ 15. frrr 1.1,1 Put AEGIS on line. DD/P*, DD/I*, DD/S&T DD/S 16. (IV, 37) Support automatic dissemination. DD/P*, DD/I*, DD/S&T DD/S (IV, 38) Expand automatic dissemination. DD/P*, DD/I* DD/S, DD/S&T :7./18. (III, 30) OCS coordinate changes with user. DD/P*, DD/I*, DD/S&T DD/S 1./20. (III, 31) Improve OCS Procedures DD/P*, DD/I, DD/S&T DD/S Manual. *Dp comment?Concurrence assumed. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : C-IA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 ?ION ,z10,; -.1 15) Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 ADP Advisor to ExDir-Compt. OCS Ex officio on IDB. Centralize most computer in OCS. User budgeting for ADP. Develop ADP objectives and plan. Technical and data standards. Career Service. Develop Training. Transfer IPRD functions assets to OCS. Reject Community R&D Center. CONCURRENCE DD/P, DD/S DD/P, DD/S, DD/S&T DD/I* DD/S, DD/S&T DD/I*, DD/S&T, D/P* DD/P*, DD/I* DD/S DD/S, Tyrd-rw. A.A.L1 " DD/S&T, DD/I*, DD/I*, DD/P* DD/S, DD/I*, DD/P*, Same management control DD/S, DD/P* for R&D as other projects. -2enc.-.9. assumed. NOHCOHCUPITIICE DD/CM, DD/I DD/P, DD/I DD/I, DD/S&T, DD/P, DD/S DD/I, DD/S&T., DIVP IMONCILSI77 LD/I sutl-,orts status cu.o and fu.ture technical develonents. DD/9 2D/S sees need for ADP objeetice 2annet see relevance of an o7.-crall -c7an dvorced frcm the fun :..tions DD/S, DD/S&T DD/S, DD/S&7,' DD/S&T DD/S&T Approved For Release 2000/05/23-: CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 ? Approved For Release 2000105/21 CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 9 October 1970 ASPIN - OFFICE- CONCLUSICNS & RECOMMENDATIONS 1. FOREIGN MISSILE & SPACE ANALYSIS CENTER (FMSAC) The comprehensive ADP needs of FMSAC for its intel- ligence production require daily consultation and support from the Office of Computer Services (OCS). The most burdensome aspect of ADP involves the continuous redevelop- ment of FMSAC intelligence _production computer programs for operation under the changing OCS data processing environment. We recommend that: (a) eooi,dination ot.:ween OCS and FMSAC be expanded when changes in OCS digital computer equipment, systems, and/or operating procedures 7re to be implemented. (b) OCS efforts be -xtended to obtain and/or evaluate a general purpose r.ta management system for Agency use and to supp)rt F,..:SAC's Information System requirements. (c) experimentatio, with use of ADP for intelli- gence production be continu.'d (e.g., generate the FMSAC quarterly reports.of analyss on foreign missile and space events from the new comprehensive Information System). (d) capabilities he expanded to improve data processing of current information receipts, to economically process peak loadings of information, and to process a growing volume of foreign missile and space information. 2. OFFICE OF ELINT (OEL) We believe that the ,development of advanced ELINT processing systems is essential. Better coordination of OEL and its contractors wit-r1 OCS systems analysis efforts seems to be needed to support both the OEL processing and moel Approved For Release 2000/95/23 v.:,ciA-RopVV#2gpir0002000i-4 Approved For Release 2000/051234CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 the OEL collection actiVitie. The techniques. involved have many attributes in common and can, in many instances, be solved by common techniqu. We recommend that: (a) a technical pc w panel be established in OEI, to review past, exictin proposed analysis programs and projects to dol. ,Itline their relative effectiveness, relationship each other and to othel, work 1,Ing done on signal an '1:ysia and that the panel n'presenLativcc frog th other organizations involved in signal pro sine and, possibly, an outside cont.ra,ftor. (I)) personnel be pPidod to Analysis Division/OEL to permit it to undertake in ernally the conceptual and detailed design of the proc,-;sing interface to OEL col- lection systems presently pe,,,Pormed under contract. 3. OFFICE OF SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE (OSI) OSVs cautious approach to ADP seems proper. In solving calculations that would be impossible because of their complexity or number of interadtions, ()SI has been successful and these efforts seem to be evolving satisfactorily. The recent addition of remote terminals in an on-line system will particularly facilitate program development and test as well as interactive running of computational programs. In general OSI!s computer usage is growing steadily.as more .personnel 'become familiar with it, and more equipment becomes available. The area that seems to Lold promise for the greatest improvement is in data indexing, storage, and retrieval, (ISR), but there appears to e no single high-priority OSI intelligence problem tha would justify an ISR research effort by itself. We recommend that ? (a) OSI support strongly, with money and manpower if needed, promising research and development efforts in the following areas: -2- e ,11 'Approved For Release 2000/05/23 :CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23.: CIA7RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 (1) .Automated c:seemination of information along the lines bei, -.7 pursued in CRS; (2) Converting 'ncoming hard copy and personal resetreh files to machine readable form; and, (3) Retaining fld exploiting information in machine readable form. (b) OSI train its ohm personnel in ADP so that they may better adapt this technology to the analytical and operational problems of ,he office. This training should cover both interactive services and batch processing. . CENTRAL REFERENCE SERVICE (CRS) Computers are making sicThificant contributions to the information handling aspc!cts of CRS' mission and their contributions can be expected to improve further. A centralized document storage and retrieval system is essential to the Agency and also provides valuable service to other agencies in the intelligence. community. - The automated subject retrieval system (AEGIS) has improved overall response to users, and further improvements are possible. A survey of potenial users, however, revealed ? many with little or no knowldge of the capabilities and usefulness of CRS machina systems. Automation also promises to improve the quality of CRS' dissemination .services. We recommend that: (a) efforts be cont 'Hued to extend the on-Zine remote query capability within CRS to improve the quality and timeliness of responses; (b) more user participation be encouraged in determining AEGIS data base :!overage and indexing policy; (c) the availability of AEGIS and other CRS services be publicized more ,laely and effectively; ,rr Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 STATSP Approved For Release 2000/05/23 :.,g1ALRDP78-04723A000300020001-4 (d) CRS analate be made more intimately aware of users' needs throNh raving and tours of duty in user offioes; (e) the possibilit. of expanding,the use of computers to support CRS' 'iog..,,aphic, installations and photographic functions be i,vestigated, in particular, the possibility of extendi.,_ the ability to build and maintain special files on-lines and, (f) the development of the .automatic dissemina- tion system be continued. -4- Approved For Release 200005/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 STATSPEC 010FICE OF BASIC & GEOGP ,PNIC INTELLIGENCE (0EGI) OBGI is engaged in an active ADP program which, at present, is largely oriented toward the cartographic responsibilities of the Office. ADP support for geographic research and NIS production is essentially experimental. We recommend that: (a) development of the AUTOMAP system continue. The pace of development should be guided by the availability of resources and by the capacity of the cartographers to absorb extensions of the syq.tom into their day-to-day operations. (b) Experimentatio? with techniques of statistical and numerical analysis be ei,couraged. Newer collection activities are yielding more numerically manipulatable information related to ODGf's interests, and the number of potential production car/fluter applications is increasing. 7. OFFICE OF CURRENT INTELLIGENCE (OCI) The manual files maintained in OCI are adequate for most of the Office's requirements. Except for a few situation-oriented retrieval problems there is little felt need.for ADP support for information storage and retrieval. The need for ADP computational capability is small?currently limited to Tayesian probability calcula- tions. _Although text proCesing routines'-promise ultimately great power to manipulate. information, they are currently too primitive and take toe -,ach computer and analyst time to be, cost effective. No recommendations. Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/ti5/23:.ek-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 . OFFICE OF ECONOMIC INTELLIGENCE (OER) Most of OER's ADP applisations originated to relieve analysts.of.the burdens of etensive manual calculation and to permit the useof sophisticated mathematical- economic models in analysis of intelligence problems. Most applications of this type have been demonstrably cost effective. The relatively few file management applications in OER's inventory of ADP applications suggests that there is substantial room for growth in this area. Indeed, several n.alysts specifically mentioned that the "record keeping" beLind their ADP applications might be automated. .?Small file management applications can build from the lessons csL the successful CHILEC and COMPIN projects: carefully selected subsets of existing systems were redesigned for the specific applications. We recommend that: (a) OER continue vu develop and improve its rio calculation capa;iLities by providing more icntific szt7,19ou ic packages, by training OER - the ase oy Dackages and basic programming pro9iriin on-, ne access, and by developing to in the initiation and maintenance ,e,cations. 'd) OER move towar(1 developing banks of raw, zted intelligence data maintained at the branch .,,Ys L. and repositories of finished, evaluated intelligence data maintained at the Office level. These sources would provide data for inter-country studies and for current intelligence support. . OFFICE OF STRATEGIC RESEARCH (OSR) OSR has numerous and,varied ADP applications which are demonstrably cost effective. .Indeed, some of the most important analyses accomplished by the Office would be prohihitively expensive if C't0 manually making machine.- assistence es,sunt:Lal to th ()trice's mission. The most ambitious ADP applicationeurrently under development is QUIYTRAK. While the basic QIKTRAK concept is sound, programming design and subrustine structures may be less Approved ForRelease200w05/2:3 uIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 S, in Approved For Release 2000/05123 : C A-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 ? easily modified than i?s d,2.-cable and input costs my turn out to be significantly higher than anticipated originally. QUIKTRAK files 11,,ve be-a Loo limited thus far to test the system on live pro lems. Moreover, there is no plan for a controlled test or evaluation to measure the effectiveness of the applicalion and to determine detailed requirements for expansion -ad/or modification. We recommend that. a controlled test be conducted to measure the effectiveness of QUIKTRAK and to determine the detailed requirements fop expansion and/or modification. 10. NATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHIC INTERPRETATION CENTER (NPIC) NPIC currently ,has its full share of problems in the ADP field. It is expected, however, that when the Integrated Information Systm (IIS) becomes operational (scheduled during second :(711:17,rter of FY 1971) most, if not all, of these proh1crir will i)e, alleviated and/or solved. Thi: is not to say that NP should then set back and be satisfied with its ADP pctuxe. Rather, as soon as poSsible, after declaring. IIS operational, NPIC should devote a continuous effort t) expand, improve, and update the system. We recommend that: (a) Both FORTRAN ani COBOL programming capabilities be provided at upwards of 100 terminal devices to NPIC professionals throughout the Center. Such capabilities will permit the computers t help solve specific problems encountered by these personn,l.in their particular areas of professional expertise. (b) Efforts to deveop a capability to search of documents be continued. (;) ADP support to :he research, development, 7ineering work of NPIC he expanded. In the past, Lit , such .-Support was possible because of the priority need to develop and implement the ITS. Approved For Release 2000Y05/23-CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/0.5/23.%C.IA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 (d) Emphapi's coninued on the need to -Improve etructure, /c) optim-wle the utiligation of :,,!;nacc,04116. maev oto:eaLie, and to -eeek a bettor method_ 1;he two central- procecoors and associated core. ? ? .1.WOMATION RIT.QUIREMENT STAPP (IRS) hai. undertaken aItantia1 effort to provide tor trequent and general evuation of intelligence information collection syst. Only an automated system is. likely to contain the scr:: and flexibility necessary to exploit these data oxtensvely on a cost-effective basis. Wo recommend that the d, ';a being obtained in an attempt to evaluate intalligneo collection activitice be recorded in machine readaiile form and a program be developcd for its analysis. Approved For Release 2000/65i23-!CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved 25X1A 25X1A Approved 4, , DATE C1A-RDP7)13-0472: F c:TrEN?Wgibledillie213 : TO: Mr. ROOM NO. BUILDING 710 Magazine REMARKS: FYI - per IP Boar, discussion today. FROM: ROOM NO. I BUILDING EXTENSION F8F144:716s 200M5/23 : CIA- Iii?-O472 FORM NO .0A 1 REPLACES FORM 36-8 I FEB 55 4-1- WHICH MAY BE USED. (47) A000300020001-4 A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 iCIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 fir IV. IMPACT ON THE SUPPORT DIRECTORATE GENERAL Part VI of the ASPIN Report should be read in its antirety by senior Support Directorate officials as its impact could be far-reaching if adopted by management. This section contains implications for virtually all offices within the Directorate. The report on Organizational and Management Aspects of ADP in the Agency should also be reviewed. ASPIN has recommended strongly that the research conducted by ORD/An in the field of Automatic Data Processing be brought under the cognizance of OCS; that all outstanding contracts being sponsored or monitored by ORD/An be reviewed by the IPB; that the hardware resources of ORD/An be transferred to other ADP components or be declared surplus; that ADP development projects be given the same scrutiny and review that has been established for major equipment and software acquisitions. This recommendation will have some impact on the Office of Logistics if adopted. The ASPIN Report recommends that Applications Programmers be assigned to tours of duty with customer compone7- - much in the same way that Security Officers, Logistics _:s and Communicators are assigned to customer elements. If accepted, this recommendation could prove a considerable boon to DD/S offices as these programmers would serve in the offices con- cerned and would report to the office heads rather than to OCS.. Under this scheme the Applications Programmers would tend to become thoroughly familiar with the problems of the offices to which assigned and be able to present solutions to problems more cogently and comprehensively by virtue of being "involved" to a greater degree. Being responsive to the "customer" will, we feel, make the programming effort more viable over the .long haul in addition to effecting better day-to-day solutions to intelli- gence problems. Implicit in the ASPIN Report (at least to this writer) is the need to create another study group to review the entire information handling process within the agency, i.e., the receipt control and?alstri ution of?all documentary material regardless of the means by which it is received. At this late date there .does not appear to be any appreciable standardization in the field of information handling; each directorate and each office within tli directorates has developed its own proprL440y means of receiving sorting, and distributing info?iation. The DD/P has itsRID, DD/SU tasks FMSAC for some basic distribution of electrical materials, DD/I relies on CRS, OC has its RMB, OS has its own telecommunications network, OSA has a comprehensive telecommunications capability, etc. It would seem salutary to (conduct a review of the total communications-dissemination-ADP Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 structure extant to provide management with a comprehensive picture of the system, possible approaches to its improvement and the elimination of duplication where indicated. A great amount of material received by the Agency in "machine language" is reproduced as a document and subsequently reprocessed into "machine language" for storage, retrieval and manipulation in computer based files. It would appear that the time is upon us to study the somewhat amorphous relationships that exist between our electrical communications services, the several dissemination services and the automatic data processing activities of the agency. Such a study is particularly apt at this time in view of the work being done by CRS in the realm of automated dissemination and the joint efforts of OC, the Cable Secretariat and the Intelligence Watch with regard to the ACT Program. SECURITY By virtue of having sensitive operational files, adminis- trative files, payroll records, name check files, TKH data, etc., resident in a computer based system which is connected to remote points via communications lines, a serious set of security considerations are raised. The resolution of the problems en- gendered by this situation becomes complex and involves a number of technical disciplines ranging from physical security pre- cautions, through and inc,luding issuance of clearances, EMSEC, and the design of algorithms to prevent release of information to unauthorized persons. Security officers must become broadly aware of and personally involved in the data processing milieu. This is being done at present by training, by assignment of security personnel to the Office of Computer Services and by review of computer security problems within the community. Security and privacy in computer operations is an esoteric field and it would appear that the Office of Security will have to identify and develop personnel resources to cope with this con- tinuing problem. I foresee the assignment of both OS personnel to OCS and OCS Applications Programmers or Systems Analysts to OS in order to arrive at meaningful solutions to the several problem areas extant. LOGISTICS STATS P EC The automation of certain functions will have an im- pact on the Printing Services Division of the Office of Logistics. The study on the Office of Basicand Geographic Intelligence will also be of interest to the .Printing Services Division as will 25X1 A the Report on Text Stream Processing. Approved For Release 2000/65/23 :-CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 25X1A Approved For Release 2000/05/23 : CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 HXAN BUMET WR oxporionce in the', use of the proprietary proram package CROSSTABS should be of interest to Support Directorate personnel engaged in SIPS, financial accounting, payroll. and budgeting. COMMUNICATIONS In addition to the comments made under the GENERAL heading, the following are of interest to the Office of Communications: The implementation of the Integrated Information . System at NPIC could result in a substantial technical engineer- ing and installation workload for OC as the need for remote terminal devices connected to the system is felt. The report on Monitoring, Filo Pro- cessing and Computational Support to Missile and Space Related Systems will be of interest. The study on the Office of ELINT should be reviewed by the Special Programs Division r- the Office of Communications. Much of the work being conducted by the Office of ELINT in the realm of signal analysis and machine-ded collection systems is of direct interest to OC-SPD ..r.d a cialogue between these two elements should prove mutually beneficial. Approved For Release 2000/05/23-f CIA-RDP78-04723A000300020001-4 25X1A 25X1 A A SENDER WILL CHECK CLASSIFICATION TOP AND BO ralgt3A R p no vedricoxaelitasel 2!:10416/9AgNcl&R w OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP TO NAME AND ADDRESS DATE INITIALS 1 /0/9A 0 Ili 2 710 Magazine Bldg 3 4 5 6 ACTION DIRECT REPLY PREPARE REPLY APPROVAL DISPATCH RECOMMENDATION COMMENT FILE RETURN CONCURRENCE INFORMATION SIGNATURE Remarks: Bob, h/w the bit I wrote on ASPIN impact on Support Directorate. i FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER FROM: NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NO. DATE ' .w.... SOD ?proveid(114:04114Wase 2000 igetEer,n34A- Ft ErN04123A FORM NO. 037 Use previous editions 1-67 L. (40) 00300020001-4 00300020001-4 Approved For Release 2000/05/2f.tFRDP78-04723A000300020001-4 10 JUL 1970 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director, Project ASPIN SUBJECT ASPIN Draft Dated 7 July 1970 1. The Security Records and Communications Division is in general agreement with the content of the subject draft as it applies to the problems we have experienced. We, however, would like to take issue with the statement made on page 12 that the degradation of TSMON service bothered no one and therefore "perhaps measures the need for the service." 2. During the pant year, the Office of Security has con- tinually voiced its disapproval with the quality of interactive service received from OCS. We have registered our complaints through IPC channels and at almost every Computer Users Group Meeting. It is partially as a result of our complaints that OCS decided to move the SANCA file to the 360/65 at the cost of $90,000 per month, which perhaps better measures either the need for the service or the amount of complaining done by TSMON users or both 3. The fact that Security was able to "retreat" to its manual files during periods when the system was useless pre- vented a potentially disasterous situation. Fortunately, the Office of Security anticipated the possible breakdown of remote terminal services and maintained its "hand-files" and it will continue to maintain this file until a reliable back-up computer system is provided. 25X1A co: Mr. Approved For Chief, Security Records and Communications Division ocom n4020001-4 kfs4 0/06A : ett rews 78-0 25X1A Approved For Release 2000/0Nt IptAfIR r8-04723A000300020001-4 tt19 ? !IJI.,11 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chief, ASPIN Staff SUBJECT Leo: R