Source: Edwin Black at thecuttingedgenews.com (8-13-07)
Although
officials of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum have
steadfastly insisted that the secret records at the International
Tracing Service located at Bad Arolsen are technically not ready for
the Internet, both Red Cross and senior Bad Arolsen officials deny
this. Indeed, Red Cross and senior Bad Arolsen officials confirm that
most of their 42 million records could be made Internet ready within
three-to-four months. Moreover, the Red Cross reveals, the idea of
Internet access directly from Bad Arolsen computers bypassing a
complicated and costly 11-nation export and transfer was twice
suggested earlier this year: once by French delegates to the Commission
and again by Bad Arolsen technology officers. Both offers were refused.
The Bad Arolsen computerized search mechanisms have been misportrayed
by some news reports. But in a series of conference calls with this
reporter followed by a requested official written statement of
technical specifications, Bad Arolsen chief technology officer Michael
Hoffman and archivist Udo Yost, explained for the first time exactly
how their system works. The ITS system, ten years in development, uses
three interactive sets of prisoner informational data including TIFF
and JPEG images of Nazi-era prisoner cards. Hoffman confirmed that
given the correct name, birth date and birth city, “with a little luck,
we get a hit on the full data set. If the system cannot get the correct
information about a named individual on the first try, it defaults to
the next probable hit using the sequence numbers, going through the
candidate names. For example, for a person named “Rosenbaum,” the
system first gives all the “Rosenbaums,” and then automatically gives
you the next Rosenbaum, and the next Rosenbaum, until you find the
correct Rosenbaum.”...
Copyright 2007 Edwin Black
All Rights Reserved