Spooks 2.0: The CIA Turns to Wiki Technology Programming Databases by Techwriter10 …speakers Don Burke, who has the very cool title of Intellipedia Doyen (which is defined, by the way, as a…and Sean Dennehy, who has the less lofty title of Intellipedia Evangelist, the wiki seemed like a natural fit for a… only, while others can edit and join the conversation. Intellipedia is actually a platform, a collection of tools including ones… Re: Spooks 2.0: The CIA Turns to Wiki Technology Programming Databases by Techwriter10 Quick correction: The Intellipedia Evangelist's name is Sean Dennehy, not Donnelly as I had written. Working to get that corrected as quickly possible. Re: Spooks 2.0: The CIA Turns to Wiki Technology Programming Databases by guineu Think about what could happen if someone with Top Secret / Editing clearance gets a nudge from a high level civilian government executive to post something nasty about a country we're at political odds with, which may or may not be true. Re: Spooks 2.0: The CIA Turns to Wiki Technology Programming Databases by Techwriter10 Thanks for the comment. I agree it's possible that there's room for that, but the fact that you have to use a sign-on and there is an audit trail means it's probably less likely to happen than it would with the traditional way of sharing information among analysts. And the analysts reviewing that entry would hopefully push back if the information … Re: Spooks 2.0: The CIA Turns to Wiki Technology Programming Databases by guineu Wouldn't you say that House Committee members are "Pushing Back" pretty hard to get important documents released by the Executive branch as we write, and read? They aren't getting very far, are they? I guess they don't have a high enough level of "Top Secret/Editing" clearance.