FACT: According to the law establishing the new position, the Director of National Intelligence is charged with “the recruitment and training of women, minorities, and individuals with diverse ethnic, cultural, and linguistic backgrounds,” as a way of broadening the personnel base on which the nation relies for intelligence analysis.
ANALYSIS: I’ve noticed that one of the single-most-viewed posts in this six-month-old blog has been my early profile of Dr. Lisa Porter, when she was appointed the first director of IARPA, the advanced-tech crowd for the intelligence community.
I can tell that the large volume of hits isn’t from my normal reader crowd, but comes in from search results. There was another uptick of hits on that old post this week, driven by searchers using Google and Live Search, and I believe it’s because WIRED magazine has its own profile of Porter in its new edition, the one with “Apple: Evil/Genius” on the cover.
The new profile, while short, doesn’t mind taking advantage of her apparently unexpected good looks; it begins, “Picture Q as a tall blonde woman with an American accent, and you’ve got Porter. Lisa Porter.”
Filed under: Government, innovation, Intelligence, R&D, Society, Technology | Tagged: anime, DARPA, diversity, DNI, entertainment, equal rights, geeks, HR, human resources, IARPA, IC, innovation, Intelligence, Intelligence Community, Lisa Porter, magazines, media, ODNI, R&D, recruitment, research, Society, tech, Technology, Wired, WIRED magazine, woman, women | 5 Comments »