Weaponized Personal Information
Wars have a way of bringing out the best and worst qualities in humans.?Courage, selflessness, loyalty, discipline, perseverance are all virtues that stand out.?Likewise, the sins of man are on full display whenever there are wars, and are likely the cause of them.?One of the things that makes the war in Ukraine so uniquely horrible is the amount of participants' personal data being captured, analyzed against social media sites, and then shared with family members and the public.?Artificial intelligence, trained on billions of social media posts, can identify just about anyone and any military personnel today.?Once identified, personal information can be associated with them and stories told - true or not.
Jack McDonald, a senior lecturer in war studies at King’s College London, was?quoted?by Wired as saying, "Openly publishing lists of your opponent[s], particularly at the scale that digital operations appear to allow, seems very new.” What kind of information is being shared with the public? Names, birthdays, passport numbers, job titles and photos of them in death.
Why would personal information be weaponized in this way and shared with the public and the victims' families??John Boyd, an American military strategist, taught the ultimate objective of an army is not to kill more enemy on the battlefield, but rather to create mental trauma, disorder, confusion, distrust and the "loss of will" to continue.?For those reasons, personal data is being weaponized to attack the mental state of an opponent, their families and their country.?That is not justification, or a defense of said practice, but it is their reasoning.?Here are some examples from the headlines in the past two weeks.
Even before the Ukraine war, American military personnel were being victimized by nefarious use of personal information.?A close family member of mine entered the military and filled out detailed security background information, and soon because of a data breach, all of his personal history and information was stolen.?The Washington Post?reported?on it, "Two major breaches of U.S. government databases holding personnel records and security-clearance files exposed sensitive information about at least 22.1 million people, including not only federal employees and contractors but their families and friends."?Soon after those involved in the data breach used the personal information to extract money from his grandparents.?This information is still out in there bouncing around the ether.??
We, as a society, have not stopped long enough to ponder the merits of this world we are creating.??
Thanks for these insights Kevin. Cyber warfare and crime are being taken to the next level. Add to that the leverage of crypto platforms to move funds with next to no traceability means we have groups residing in the dark web who are invisible to most of us.