Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

Subscribe to Read | $0.00

Join today and start reading your favorite books for Free!

Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

  • Download on iOS
  • Download on Android
  • Download on iOS

Government Activities to Detect, Deter and Disrupt Threats Enumerating from the Dark Web

Government Activities to Detect, Deter and Disrupt Threats Enumerating from the Dark Web

United States Army Command and General Staff College
0/5 ( ratings)
This study has footnotes, charts, graphs, definition of terms, and bibliography. It is from U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and Nenad V. Denic, .

“The surface web has become too risky for terrorist groups. The sites for spreading information about terrorist activities such as fundraising, training and recruiting on surface web can be easily shut down by government authorities. Terrorist forums, propaganda, fundraising sites and recruiting websites have been migrated from surface web to the dark web. However, the activities on the dark web are not easy to shut down. Either way, there is still a possibility to deny, degrade or disrupt illicit user activities.

“Government activities to detect, deter and disrupt threats emanating from the dark web are successful. There are several examples of successful operations that happens in past to either shutdown illicit dark web site or to de-anonymize the administrators or users. Those operations were executed with coalition partners or unilaterally. Government institutions in concert with coalition partners can detect, deter, and disrupt threats emanating from the dark web. By conducting offensive cyber activities across a wide geographical area, the dark web network funding can be reduced and infrastructure along with the hidden services degraded.”

The phrase “invisible web” was used until 2001 when Michael K. Bergman in his research paper “The deep web: Surfacing Hidden Value.” introduced new term “deep webˮ. The opposition of the “deep webˮ become “surface webˮ what was previously referred on “visible web”. The term “invisible web” has referred only to web pages that are not indexed by search engines. The deep web does not represent only sites that cannot be accessed directly through conventional search engines; it also represents content on the Internet which is: Inaccessible to current conventional search engines, accessible only for targeted queries or keywords, protected from search engines crawlers, protected by security mechanisms , or protected by logical or encrypted structure which is inaccessible from outside
Pages
87
Format
Kindle Edition

Government Activities to Detect, Deter and Disrupt Threats Enumerating from the Dark Web

United States Army Command and General Staff College
0/5 ( ratings)
This study has footnotes, charts, graphs, definition of terms, and bibliography. It is from U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and Nenad V. Denic, .

“The surface web has become too risky for terrorist groups. The sites for spreading information about terrorist activities such as fundraising, training and recruiting on surface web can be easily shut down by government authorities. Terrorist forums, propaganda, fundraising sites and recruiting websites have been migrated from surface web to the dark web. However, the activities on the dark web are not easy to shut down. Either way, there is still a possibility to deny, degrade or disrupt illicit user activities.

“Government activities to detect, deter and disrupt threats emanating from the dark web are successful. There are several examples of successful operations that happens in past to either shutdown illicit dark web site or to de-anonymize the administrators or users. Those operations were executed with coalition partners or unilaterally. Government institutions in concert with coalition partners can detect, deter, and disrupt threats emanating from the dark web. By conducting offensive cyber activities across a wide geographical area, the dark web network funding can be reduced and infrastructure along with the hidden services degraded.”

The phrase “invisible web” was used until 2001 when Michael K. Bergman in his research paper “The deep web: Surfacing Hidden Value.” introduced new term “deep webˮ. The opposition of the “deep webˮ become “surface webˮ what was previously referred on “visible web”. The term “invisible web” has referred only to web pages that are not indexed by search engines. The deep web does not represent only sites that cannot be accessed directly through conventional search engines; it also represents content on the Internet which is: Inaccessible to current conventional search engines, accessible only for targeted queries or keywords, protected from search engines crawlers, protected by security mechanisms , or protected by logical or encrypted structure which is inaccessible from outside
Pages
87
Format
Kindle Edition

More books from United States Army Command and General Staff College

Rate this book!

Write a review?

loader