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Advanced technologies combating terrorism in the EU : The psychological warfare aspect. / Bazarkina, Darya.

14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019. ed. / Louise Leenen; Noelle van der Waag-Cowling; Noelle van der Waag-Cowling. Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited, 2019. p. 23-29.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Harvard

Bazarkina, D 2019, Advanced technologies combating terrorism in the EU: The psychological warfare aspect. in L Leenen, N van der Waag-Cowling & N van der Waag-Cowling (eds), 14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019. Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited, pp. 23-29, 14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019, Стелленбос, South Africa, 28/02/19.

APA

Bazarkina, D. (2019). Advanced technologies combating terrorism in the EU: The psychological warfare aspect. In L. Leenen, N. van der Waag-Cowling, & N. van der Waag-Cowling (Eds.), 14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019 (pp. 23-29). Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited.

Vancouver

Bazarkina D. Advanced technologies combating terrorism in the EU: The psychological warfare aspect. In Leenen L, van der Waag-Cowling N, van der Waag-Cowling N, editors, 14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019. Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited. 2019. p. 23-29

Author

Bazarkina, Darya. / Advanced technologies combating terrorism in the EU : The psychological warfare aspect. 14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019. editor / Louise Leenen ; Noelle van der Waag-Cowling ; Noelle van der Waag-Cowling. Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited, 2019. pp. 23-29

BibTeX

@inproceedings{145024a773ad49a0aeaf5a5fd83f352a,
title = "Advanced technologies combating terrorism in the EU: The psychological warfare aspect",
abstract = "At present, work with big data is becoming particularly relevant in the security sphere. It helps, for example, to track terrorist propaganda on the internet and social media. Special programs are required to process large amounts of information. In this regard, the development of artificial intelligence, capable of creating analytical products in the field of security, is discussed by many researchers. The Strategic Research Agenda for Robotics in Europe 2014–2020 says the significant opportunities for robotics will be in (among others) the area of security (EU Robotics, 2014). The implementation of various technical solutions in the security field is often perceived ambiguously: law enforcement agencies may be accused of unjustified espionage. This often gives rise to a new round of public debates, in which provocateurs from terrorist groups can attack the reputation of law enforcement structures, accusing the state of repression. Along with these traditional challenges, new ones are emerging in the framework of psychological warfare. The generation of news items according to data received during the above-mentioned processes will also be increasingly generated by task automation bots. The possible use of such equipment by terrorist organisations will allow them to create, at certain moments, a quantitative predominance of terrorist propaganda. The author of the present paper used the methods of case studies, system and situation analysis. The research question was formulated as follows: how do the advanced technologies in EU counterterrorism influence psychological warfare? We concluded that the European Union and Member States today turn to the active use of advanced technologies in combating terrorism and its propaganda. Despite undoubtedly positive effects, the practice of outsourcing in this field can meet obstacles if the interests of high tech companies contradict those of the authorities. This problem offers a perspective for further research, as does the spectrum of problems inherent in general in the counteraction of terrorism using advanced technologies.",
keywords = "Advanced technologies, Communication, Counter-terrorism, European Union, Psychological warfare",
author = "Darya Bazarkina",
year = "2019",
month = jan,
day = "1",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781510882928",
pages = "23--29",
editor = "Louise Leenen and {van der Waag-Cowling}, Noelle and {van der Waag-Cowling}, Noelle",
booktitle = "14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019",
publisher = "Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited",
address = "United Kingdom",
note = "14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019 ; Conference date: 28-02-2019 Through 01-03-2019",
url = "https://www.academic-conferences.org/conferences/iccws/",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Advanced technologies combating terrorism in the EU

T2 - 14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019

AU - Bazarkina, Darya

N1 - Conference code: 14

PY - 2019/1/1

Y1 - 2019/1/1

N2 - At present, work with big data is becoming particularly relevant in the security sphere. It helps, for example, to track terrorist propaganda on the internet and social media. Special programs are required to process large amounts of information. In this regard, the development of artificial intelligence, capable of creating analytical products in the field of security, is discussed by many researchers. The Strategic Research Agenda for Robotics in Europe 2014–2020 says the significant opportunities for robotics will be in (among others) the area of security (EU Robotics, 2014). The implementation of various technical solutions in the security field is often perceived ambiguously: law enforcement agencies may be accused of unjustified espionage. This often gives rise to a new round of public debates, in which provocateurs from terrorist groups can attack the reputation of law enforcement structures, accusing the state of repression. Along with these traditional challenges, new ones are emerging in the framework of psychological warfare. The generation of news items according to data received during the above-mentioned processes will also be increasingly generated by task automation bots. The possible use of such equipment by terrorist organisations will allow them to create, at certain moments, a quantitative predominance of terrorist propaganda. The author of the present paper used the methods of case studies, system and situation analysis. The research question was formulated as follows: how do the advanced technologies in EU counterterrorism influence psychological warfare? We concluded that the European Union and Member States today turn to the active use of advanced technologies in combating terrorism and its propaganda. Despite undoubtedly positive effects, the practice of outsourcing in this field can meet obstacles if the interests of high tech companies contradict those of the authorities. This problem offers a perspective for further research, as does the spectrum of problems inherent in general in the counteraction of terrorism using advanced technologies.

AB - At present, work with big data is becoming particularly relevant in the security sphere. It helps, for example, to track terrorist propaganda on the internet and social media. Special programs are required to process large amounts of information. In this regard, the development of artificial intelligence, capable of creating analytical products in the field of security, is discussed by many researchers. The Strategic Research Agenda for Robotics in Europe 2014–2020 says the significant opportunities for robotics will be in (among others) the area of security (EU Robotics, 2014). The implementation of various technical solutions in the security field is often perceived ambiguously: law enforcement agencies may be accused of unjustified espionage. This often gives rise to a new round of public debates, in which provocateurs from terrorist groups can attack the reputation of law enforcement structures, accusing the state of repression. Along with these traditional challenges, new ones are emerging in the framework of psychological warfare. The generation of news items according to data received during the above-mentioned processes will also be increasingly generated by task automation bots. The possible use of such equipment by terrorist organisations will allow them to create, at certain moments, a quantitative predominance of terrorist propaganda. The author of the present paper used the methods of case studies, system and situation analysis. The research question was formulated as follows: how do the advanced technologies in EU counterterrorism influence psychological warfare? We concluded that the European Union and Member States today turn to the active use of advanced technologies in combating terrorism and its propaganda. Despite undoubtedly positive effects, the practice of outsourcing in this field can meet obstacles if the interests of high tech companies contradict those of the authorities. This problem offers a perspective for further research, as does the spectrum of problems inherent in general in the counteraction of terrorism using advanced technologies.

KW - Advanced technologies

KW - Communication

KW - Counter-terrorism

KW - European Union

KW - Psychological warfare

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85066036947&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - http://toc.proceedings.com/48113webtoc.pdf

M3 - Conference contribution

AN - SCOPUS:85066036947

SN - 9781510882928

SP - 23

EP - 29

BT - 14th International Conference on Cyber Warfare and Security, ICCWS 2019

A2 - Leenen, Louise

A2 - van der Waag-Cowling, Noelle

A2 - van der Waag-Cowling, Noelle

PB - Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited

Y2 - 28 February 2019 through 1 March 2019

ER -

ID: 45847844