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CIA releases 13m pages of declassified documents online
#1
Happy reading all  - there must be some stuff worth perusing in that number of pages.

Quote:[Image: _93646973_mediaitem93646972.jpg]

About 13 million pages of declassified documents from the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) have been released online.

The records include UFO sightings and psychic experiments from the Stargate programme, which has long been of interest to conspiracy theorists.

The move came after lengthy efforts from freedom of information advocates and a lawsuit against the CIA.

The full archive is made up of almost 800,000 files.

They had previously only been accessible at the National Archives in Maryland.

The trove includes the papers of Henry Kissinger, who served as secretary of state under presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, as well as several hundred thousand pages of intelligence analysis and science research and development.

Among the more unusual records are documents from the Stargate Project, which dealt with psychic powers and extrasensory perception.

Those include records of testing on celebrity psychic Uri Geller in 1973, when he was already a well-established performer.

Memos detail how Mr Geller was able to partly replicate pictures drawn in another room with varying - but sometimes precise - accuracy, leading the researchers to write that he "demonstrated his paranormal perceptual ability in a convincing and unambiguous manner".

[Image: _93646829_gellercomp.jpg]

Other unusual records include a collection of reports on flying saucers, and the recipes for invisible ink.

While much of the information has been technically publicly available since the mid-1990s, it has been very difficult to access.

The records were only available on four physical computers located in the back of a library at the National Archives in Maryland, between 09:00 and 16:30 each day.

A non-profit freedom of information group, MuckRock, sued the CIA to force it to upload the collection, in a process which took more than two years.

At the same time, journalist Mike Best crowd-funded more than $15,000 to visit the archives to print out and then publicly upload the records, one by one, to apply pressure to the CIA.

"By printing out and scanning the documents at CIA expense, I was able to begin making them freely available to the public and to give the agency a financial incentive to simply put the database online," Best wrote in a blog post.
CIA releases 13m pages of declassified documents online - BBC News
#2
Sheesh, 13 million pages??? Yikes minusculespooked 

Wouldn't be so bad if they had a table of contents of sorts...yunno, so one could skip to the part they are interested in most. LOL. :smallwink:


Seriously tho, just wow.
That is a lot of reading material to keep one busy for years.
Oh, but what fun interesting stuff one would find, I'm sure.

a.k.a. 'snarky412'
 
        

#3
Thanks, I was starting to get bored.  Now I have something to do.   mediumalien
#4
(01-19-2017, 04:33 AM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote: Thanks, I was starting to get bored.  Now I have something to do.   mediumalien

Should keep you busy over the weekend :)


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