OPM is currently conducting market research to find companies to assist with a pilot program tracking social media posts, according to a post made on April 8.
“Do you have the capability to conduct automated and expansive searches using web crawlers/software to accurately identify publicly available electronic information (PAEI) pertinent to a specific Subject? (PAEI includes, but is not limited to, news and media sites, social media sites, micro-blogs, social networking sites, blogs, forums, public record court websites, picture and video sharing websites and on-line commerce websites),” the information request posted by OPM asks.
They are looking for fully automated capabilities, “with no human intervention,” as well as the ability to crawl, “in the parts of the World Wide Web whose contents are not indexed by standard search engines.”
“Officials now plan to roll out the new program in phases, with at least 5 percent of top-secret clearance holders being continuously evaluated by March 2017. As of December, about 225,000 personnel undergo the automatic checks,” NextGov reported.
A California-based tech company called Social Intelligence was awarded a contract by OPM in June 2015 for a preliminary program to examine the use of social media monitoring and surveillance in the clearance process.
Last year OPM suffered a massive data breach by hackers who accessed millions of background investigation records, leaving many critical of their ability to protect their data.