Monday, October 16, 2006

CIA's In-Q-Tel Investments Portfolio

In a previous post "Aha, a Backdoor!" I discussed the "exemption" of publicly traded companies from reporting to the SEC the usual way, and particularly their investments related to national security. The strategy is visionary enough to act a major incentive factor for companies to both, innovate, and supply the homeland security and defense markets.

However, publicly obtainable data can still reveal historical developments:

"A relatively unknown branch of the CIA is investing millions of taxpayer dollars in technology startups that, together, paint a map for the future of spying. Some of these technologies can pry into the personal lives of Americans not just for the government but for big businesses as well.

The CIA's venture capitalist arm, In-Q-Tel, has invested at least $185 million in startups since 1999, molding these companies' products into technologies the intelligence community can use.

More than 60 percent of In-Q-Tel’s current investments are in companies that specialize in automatically collecting, sifting through and understanding oceans of information, according to an analysis by the Medill School of Journalism. While In-Q-Tel has successfully helped push data analysis technology ahead, implementing it within the government for national security remains a challenge, and one of In-Q-Tel’s former CEOs, Gilman Louie, has concerns about whether privacy and civil liberties will be protected."

In a related Red Herring article, In-Q-Tel points out that :

We don’t just invest in equity of companies,” said Scott Yancey, the firm’s interim chief executive. “That’s kind of the hallmark of who we are in terms of being the strategic investor.”

Observers said the payments don’t fit with the typical venture model.

“To the extent that In-Q-Tel incentivizes its portfolio companies or employees otherwise, it sounds like from an outsider’s point of view that they’ve needed to create some artificial incentives that wouldn’t otherwise be necessary in a traditional venture model,” said Scott Joachim, a partner with the law firm Drinker, Biddle, & Reath."


The Intelligence Community realizes that innovation will come from outsiders working for insiders, and with "more than 130 technology solutions to the intelligence community", CIA's In-Q-Tel seems to have made quite some sound investments.

A true angel investor in the "silent war". And yes, even you can submit a business plan looking for seed capital -- and a "tail" to ensure you're developing in the right direction?

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