Briefing | Trainspotting, but with nukes

Open-source intelligence challenges state monopolies on information

Academics, activists and amateurs are making imaginative use of powerful tools

IN 1960 JOHN KENNEDY, the Democratic candidate for the American presidency, accused the incumbent Republican administration of having allowed a “missile gap” to open up between America and the Soviet Union. The idea seemed plausible. The Soviet Union’s success in launching the first satellite, Sputnik, on a rocket which could double as an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) had naturally led to speculation that it was far ahead of America in the deployment of such weapons.

This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline “Trainspotting, with nukes”

The people’s panopticon: Open-source intelligence comes of age

From the August 5th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Briefing

A shift in the media business is changing what it is to be a sports fan

Team loyalty is being replaced by “fluid fandom”

Will Binyamin Netanyahu’s visit to America repair or weaken ties?

He may damage relations with Israel’s indispensable protector


Optimistic plans for post-war Gaza have little basis in reality

Aid, policing, reconstruction—everything is even harder than it sounds


Small investments in nutrition could make the world brainier

Many pregnant women and babies are malnourished—and not just in poor countries

Introducing “Boom!”

A six-part series about the generation that blew up American politics