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Bookbot

David Ronfeldt

    Whose Story Wins
    Networks and Netwars
    In Athena's Camp
    Bitskrieg
    • New technologies are changing how we protect our citizens and wage our wars. Among militaries, everything taken for granted about the ability to maneuver and fight is now undermined by vulnerability to “weapons of mass disruption”: cutting-edge computer worms, viruses, and invasive robot networks. At home, billions of household appliances and other “smart” items that form the Internet of Things risk being overtaken, then added to the ranks of massive, malicious “zombie” armies. The age of Bitskrieg is here, bringing vexing threats that range from the business sector to the battlefield. In this new book, world-renowned cyber security expert John Arquilla looks unflinchingly at the challenges posed by cyberwarfare – which he argues have neither been met nor mastered. He offers fresh solutions for protecting against enemies that are often anonymous, unpredictable and capable of projecting force and influence vastly disproportionate to their size, strength or wealth. The changes called for require radical rethinking of military and security affairs, diplomacy, even the routines of our daily lives.

      Bitskrieg
    • In Athena's Camp

      • 525pages
      • 19 heures de lecture
      3,6(31)Évaluer

      Essays about conflict in the information age that show how the information revolution is altering the nature of conflict.

      In Athena's Camp
    • Networks and Netwars

      The Future of Terror, Crime, and Militancy

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,6(43)Évaluer

      The book explores the concept of Netwar, a new form of conflict arising from the information revolution, characterized by engagements from various groups including terrorists, criminals, and civil-society activists. It emphasizes the importance for governments, military, and law enforcement to adapt and create networked structures to effectively respond to these evolving threats. Through this analysis, it highlights the need for collaboration and innovation in strategies to combat modern forms of warfare.

      Networks and Netwars
    • Whose Story Wins

      Rise of the Noosphere, Noopolitik, and Information-Age Statecraft

      • 116pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      The authors propose a shift in U.S. grand strategy towards "noopolitik," which emphasizes the use of soft power over the traditional hard power approach of realpolitik. This new concept aims to effectively counter the strategies employed by U.S. adversaries, advocating for a more nuanced and diplomatic approach to international relations.

      Whose Story Wins