Researchers close to the project say they're not sure why it was dropped late last month. Darpa hasn't provided an explanation for LifeLog's quiet cancellation. "A change in priorities" is the only rationale agency spokeswoman Jan Walker gave to Wired News.they dropped it in favor of Facebook.https://www.wired.com/2016/04/regina-dugan-leaves-google-for-facebook/Also important to note, Ex-DARPA Head has worked at Google and Facebookhttps://citizenlab.ca/2003/07/pentagon-alters-lifelog-project/>July 16, 2003>Monday is the deadline for researchers to submit bids to build the Pentagon’s so-called LifeLog project, an experiment to create an all-encompassing über-diary. Lifelog is the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s effort to gather every conceivable element of a person’s life, dump it all into a databaseso facebook project won the bidhttps://www.corbettreport.com/the-weird-darpa-facebook-coincidence-you-never-heard-about/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADVISE>It is reportedly developing a massive data mining system, which would collect and analyze data on everyone in the United States and perform a "threat analysis" on them.[1] The data can be anything from financial records, phone records, emails, blog entries, website searches, to any other electronic information that can be put into a computer system.[2] This information is then analyzed, and used to monitor social threats such as community-forming, terrorism, political organizing, or crime. 1/3">