PRO-DAESH JIHADIST PROPAGANDA. A STUDY OF SOCIAL MEDIA AND VIDEO GAMES

Journal Title: UNKNOWN - Year 2017, Vol 1, Issue 14

Abstract

<i/>The fight that Europe and the West must wage against jihadist terrorism will take some time, but if we live up to our values of integration and democracy, we will come out of it soon. As Giovanni Falcone, the Italian judge killed by the Mafia, once said about the Mafia: “It is a human phenomenon, and as all human phenomena has a start and an evolution, it will have also an end”. Jihadis have been using Twitter at least since 2010, with the Shabaab joining the site in December 2011, but never before to this extent. One early adapter of Twitter, the Afghan Taliban, began to establish their social media presence in December 2010, through which they issued brief bulletins about their actions and alerts for forthcoming communiqués. Many of the most prominent jihadi groups have followed the same path, including the Shabaab al-Mujahideen, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), and al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). The content of these Twitter accounts has tended to closely mirror material released to jihadi forums. For example, the Afghan Taliban may post the text of a communiqué to their website, to a jihadi forum, and to the Twitter account of one of their spokesmen. Mirroring jihadi groups, elements of the online jihadi community have also migrated to social media sites, with prominent forums such as Shumukh al-Islam and Ansar al- Mujahideen English Forum creating Twitter accounts to publicise notable releases and discussions. Concurrently, many individual jihadis and jihadi supporters have joined Twitter, enthusiastically circulating propaganda among themselves and promoting it to potential recruits. Yet, the benefits conferred by social networking come with a substantial cost: social networking platforms can sow great confusion if known official accounts are deleted and re-established or if there are multiple accounts claiming to represent a specific jihadi group. In order to reach the new official accounts, followers must be able to distinguish 69the legitimate social media accounts of jihadi groups from non-authenticated users, which is a level of ambiguity that is not found on jihadi forums.</i><br/><br/>

Authors and Affiliations

Magdalena El Ghamari

Keywords

Related Articles

Knowledge Development and Horizon Scanning for Strategic Longterm Planning in Cyber Security

Existing foresight studies produce expectations regarding mid-term and long-term expectations about the future. In particular, in the cyber domain, these expectations tend to change accidently, caused by disrupti...

THE CRISIS MANAGEMENT SYSTEM AND THE CIVIL PROTECTION SYSTEM. SIMILARITIES, DIFFERENCES, POSSIBILITIES OF STANDARDISATION

<i/>Crisis management, civil protection and civil defence are terms which are used every day by theoreticians and practitioners. Are they really diff erent or are they synonyms? Using various research methods (analysis o...

METEOROLOGICAL ELEMENTS OF SELECTED HISTORICAL EVENTS BASED ON THE WEATHER MAP’S DIGITAL RECONSTRUCTION

The article is an attempt to analyse the synoptic situation during the major campaigns of the twentieth century, based on the reconstruction of digital weather maps. The analysis presented allows us to determine the weig...

TACKLING CYBERSPACE THREATS – THE INTERNATIONAL APPROACH

<i/>The fact that NATO has acknowledged cyberspace as the fifth dimension of combat operations indicates that this problem issue is really topical and is pointing at the direction from which the possible threat can be ex...

THE POWER AND THE SECURITY – SELECTED ISSUES

In this article, the author presents some common areas for the categories of power and security. Diagnosis of the security environment of a political unit should include both A qualitative and...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP260177
  • DOI 10.5604/01.3001.0010.8472
  • Views 90
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Magdalena El Ghamari (2017). PRO-DAESH JIHADIST PROPAGANDA. A STUDY OF SOCIAL MEDIA AND VIDEO GAMES. UNKNOWN, 1(14), 69-90. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-260177