Unshred a document, win $50K

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency wants to improve the way it reassembles shredded documents, and is offering a prize for an effective solution

The shredded bits and pieces of paper known in Defense Department-speak as “pocket litter” have proven to be a treasure trove for intelligence operations, including in the raid of Osama bin Laden’s Pakistani hideout and at Guantanamo Bay. In those cases, information gleaned from documents found onsite and on individuals has led to mission-critical, actionable intelligence, according to DOD officials. Now the department is looking to improve the way it gleans information from the remnants of documents discovered in war zones.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has announced a competition with a prize of up to $50,000 to reconstruct shredded and damaged documents. Through the competition, DARPA hopes to learn more about the best strategies techniques for triaging and exploiting documents that could hold critical information. DARPA is also looking to gain insight into the United States’ own shredding techniques, including the vulnerabilities they could introduce and how to better protect our own information crucial to national security, according to an Oct. 27 release from the agency posted on the DOD Live blog.

“The ability to reconstruct shredded documents will potentially yield information that may save lives or offer critical information about an adversary’s plans,” Dan Kaufman, director of DARPA’s Information Innovation Office, said in the release. “Currently, this process is much too slow and too labor-intensive, particularly if the documents are handwritten. We are looking to the Shredder Challenge to generate some leap-ahead thinking in this area.”

According to DARPA, the challenge will comprise five separate problems of increasing difficulty featuring varying numbers of documents, subject matters and shredding methods. To complete each problem participants must provide answers to puzzles embedded within the documents’ content. The overall prize will depend on the number and difficulty of problems solved.

The competition is open to anyone, whether a computer scientist, puzzle enthusiast or just those who enjoy solving complex problems. Those interested can register at www.shredderchallenge.com, where more details can be found. DARPA is also using Twitter to broadcast updates and information on the challenge, using the hashtag #shredderchallenge.

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