HUGE win for NC State

We just can’t ignore a record breaking arrangement that is on the order of magnitude of 3 times bigger than anything that has ever happened in the University’s history.

NC State lands $60 million grant from NSA

As the field of “big data” continues to grow in importance, N.C. State University has landed a big coup – a major lab for the study of data analysis, funded by the National Security Agency.

A $60.75 million grant from the NSA is the largest research grant in NCSU’s history – three times bigger than any previous award.

The Laboratory for Analytic Sciences will be launched in a Centennial Campus building that will be renovated with money from the federal agency, but details about the facility are top secret. Those who work in the lab will be required to have security clearance from the U.S. government.

NCSU officials say the endeavor is expected to bring 100 new jobs to the Triangle during the next several years. The university, already a leader in data science, won the NSA contract through a competitive process.

NCSU university already has strengths in computer science, applied mathematics and statistics and a collaborative project with the NSA on cybersecurity. The university also is in the process of hiring four faculty members for its new data-driven science cluster, adding to its expertise.

“It is a big deal,” said NCSU Chancellor Randy Woodson. “It’s a natural fit for us because as an institution we’ve been about data analysis and big data for a long time. I think the National Security Agency realized that when they selected us as a university partner.”

It’s unclear exactly what kind of work will be done at the new lab, but Woodson said NCSU won’t be involved in the federal agency’s mass surveillance programs that have been the subject of controversy in the past few months.

“As a university, we’re not going to be involved in the operational intelligence work of the National Security Agency,” Woodson said. “Our partnership with them is really about the science of big data and data analysis. I don’t think there’s anything more difficult right now for both government and the private sector than making sense out of the deluge of data that we’re all swimming in every day.”

[snip]

The chancellor said big data is important for national security but also many other fields. Those with expertise in data analysis are in high demand, he said. Graduates of NCSU’s master’s in data analytics have job placement rates of 90 percent and command starting salaries of over $100,000.

In the announcement from the NSA, the agency’s director of research, Michael Wertheimer, said NCSU is the ideal location for the new lab.

“We have chosen the Research Triangle area for its vibrant academic and industry interest in large data analytics, and NC State for having the nation’s first, and preeminent, advanced degree program in data analytics,” Wertheimer’s statement said. “By immersing intelligence analysts with NC State’s diverse group of scientists, we hope to discover new and powerful ways to meet our foreign signals intelligence and information assurance missions – giving us an edge to better protect the nation.”

NCSU already has a long history with “big data.” Business software giant SAS, which is based in Cary, traces its roots to N.C. State.

Billionaire co-founders Jim Goodnight, the company’s CEO, and John Sall met when they were graduate students at NCSU and started the business in 1976. The privately held company generated $2.87 billion in revenue last year and has 13,708 employees worldwide, including 5,159 in Cary.

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36 Responses to HUGE win for NC State

  1. TheCOWDOG 08/17/2013 at 11:07 PM #

    Maybe you might give us dumbasses a primer in what the NSA does, Primewolf.

    Any version you wish.

  2. PackerInRussia 08/18/2013 at 9:30 AM #

    ^ He could tell you, but then he’d have to kill you.

  3. Gene 08/18/2013 at 1:29 PM #

    I want the NSA to totally up its spying game.

    For example, last Sunday I rented a DVD from Red Box. Watched it and then put it somewhere, such that I could not locate it until Thursday.

    I want total surveillance by the NSA. I want to be able to call the NSA and ask them where I kept my rental and they’d be like, “I can help you with that, you kept it under some mail you put on the dining table Monday,” because they’ll have so many drones and spy satellites and shit watching us.

    We’ll never have to worry about misplaced keys again. We could just call the NSA and they’d tell us where we left them.

  4. bill.onthebeach 08/18/2013 at 2:31 PM #

    ^Truth is… most of us don’t really want to know…. less is better…..

    More than a few NCS people wanted that super-super-atom-masher-collider thing to be built in Rougemont a few years ago ….but now everybody knows how that deal turned out….

    It would be interesting to know what ‘strings’ are attached to the NSA deal…. but those won’t ever see the light of day.

  5. john of sparta 08/18/2013 at 7:44 PM #

    the NSA….really?
    we are now the whipping boy for the following:
    1. NRA.
    2. Tea Party.
    3. Republicans.
    4. ok. there’s more…but, c’mon guys.
    the N*S*A? that’s a non-starter for the 40%.
    yeah, we know about the 1% with the money.
    let’s talk about the 40% that elected Obama.
    OMG….SFN….this is an ‘in your face’ moment.

  6. highstick 08/18/2013 at 11:38 PM #

    Ok, Dumbasses! I’ll tell you exactly what NSA does….but then I’d have to kill you!

    Do you know what EPA does, do you know what the State Department does, do you know what the damned Department of Agriculture does?

    Maybe if you clueless dudes that never served a moment in “Anyone’s Army” had anything remotely related to a clue, I’d say ok…Otherwise, depend on “those of us who did and do” to save your sorry asses from yourselves…

    Now that does not preclude the possibility that someone who holds the highest office has not changed the “controls” that were in place when I walked the “long halls of NSA”…

    When I was there, it was “No Such Agency” cause we didn’t work there…Then a couple of writers like Bamford started running their yaps and the the “duh-huh” media started yapping…NSA really does not exist…it’s a bogus agency created by CIA and there’s no one in that building…

    Boo! Be scared of NSA not being there…cause most of you couldn’t protect yourself from a “fireant attack”..

  7. Texpack 08/19/2013 at 8:18 AM #

    Kind of like getting a grant from the Roman Catholic Church. They both do a lot of good work all over the world, but you can’t completely ignore the parts of the organization that do things that just aren’t right.

    Hopefully this will turn out well for our University.

  8. FergusWolf 08/19/2013 at 4:19 PM #

    My problem is with the folks who want to throw the baby out with the bath water. The NSA, like most organizations, has it’s good parts and bad parts.

    So, in my opinion, saying F*** the NSA is like saying F*** the police. Sure there is the occasional bad cop, but would you want to live without any law enforcement.

    I (certainly) don’t know 99.5% of what the NSA does, but my belief is that we are hearing the worst of the worst (spying on US citizen) and don’t hear the best of the best (how many terrorists have they helped take down).

    I assume that the government is going to do certain things that I don’t know about to protect our country. I don’t know about any of them for a fact, but I’d be aghast if I found out they weren’t doing it.

    So, before announcing that the NSA is in total “bad” and not worth getting mixed up with, I ask you to consider all the things they might (probably are) doing…

    On the other hand, a lot of people are good at assuming that what the media (a bunch of Carolina grads) are reporting is the truth…the whole truth…and nothing but the truth…if so, then so help me God.

    Enjoy!

  9. 44rules 08/21/2013 at 9:55 AM #

    I’m all in and ready to help in any way I can.

    Signed,
    Mr. Snowden

  10. OutWestWolf 08/23/2013 at 8:30 PM #

    “big data” applies to vastly more fields of study and analysis (Urban Design, Natural Resource Management, numerous Medical disciplines, etc. etc., the list goes on) than the NSA’s monitoring of international phone traffic. Some of you boys need to turn off the 24 hour news cycle and put down the corn liqur for a little while.

    We are in the age of Big Data, NCSU being at the front of the pack in data and analytics is badass!

    Honestly, I still not sure if BAM and all the follow-ups are just being sarcastic. Perhaps I’m the one that’s slow on the uptake.

  11. eatmorglue 08/26/2013 at 2:09 PM #

    As math alum who focused on cryptography and computer algebra as an undergrad, this is a tremendous win for the math department, CoS, and NC State in general. Most of my professors (this was in the early 2000’s) already had long-standing working relationships with NSA so I’m sure this will only deepen those relationships. I’m also sure this will really help attract high-quality, talented math students to the program at all degree levels, since NSA is the largest employer of mathematicians in the US.

    As an American who feels horribly violated by the fundamental unconstitutionality of some current NSA programs, I’m not thrilled about it. But I also realize that calls to defund or disband NSA are reactionary and short-sighted, and that many of the mathematical problems NSA tackles every day are important both for national security as well as the advancement of mathematics and computer algebra. Dismantling or shunning NSA isn’t the answer; reigning it in to operate within the limits defined by the Constitution is what needs to happen.

    And as an NC State alumnus and fan, I agree with El Scrotcho that the timing of this is definitely some NC State shit.

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