Doug Beizer wrote an interesting article called, CIA first scoffs at, then embraces, collaborative technologies, in Washington Technology, about how the CIA has adopted web 2.0 / enterprise 2.0 technologies. In addition to the CIA’s wiki, called Intellipedia, its “[t]ools include intelligence blogs, Web-enabled shared drives, photos and a video service similar to YouTube.”
Beizer quotes Sean Dennehy, Inetellipedia evangelist at the CIA, who noted, “At this point, getting greater adoption is more a cultural problem than a technology problem.” This is no surprise to KM folks. Technology is about changing the way people do things. And as I wrote in Innovation is not a four-letter word, people resist change.
Stewart Mader also covered the article nicely on Grow Your Wiki in Why Does the CIA Keep Top Secret Intelligence in a Wiki? It’s worth a read.
It’s hard to believe that even the intelligence community is on the collaboration bandwagon. But, then again, maybe it’s all just a big government conspiracy.
LawyerKM :: Knowledge Management & Technology for Lawyers and Law Firms
Doug’s story is really interesting. It seems like the government will catch up to the consumer market in a few years.
Comment by gary williams — June 22, 2008 @ 10:44 am |
[...] Federal Bureau of Investigation — following in the footsteps of the intelligence community — has created and is testing a wiki. In fact, the users of FBI’s wiki, Bureaupedia, [...]
Pingback by The FBI Wiki | Knowledge Management « LawyerKM — September 27, 2008 @ 9:50 am |
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