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Phishing for Nazis is an evidence-based, undercover study of neo-Nazi communities on anonymous communication platforms found on the dark web.
Table des matières
1 Introduction, 2 Anonymity and Anonymous Communications, 3 White Supremacy: A Global Concern, 4 Nazi Migration to Anonymous Platforms: The Case of Holocaust Denial, 5 Antisemitism on the Dark Web: Traditional Conspiracy Theories on New Technologies, 6 Online Radicalization: From Words to Actions, 7 Conclusions and Recommendations
A propos de l'auteur
Lev Topor is an ISGAP visiting scholar at the Woolf Institute (Cambridge), a senior research fellow at the Center for Cyber Law and Policy at Haifa University, and a former visiting fellow at the International Institute for Holocaust Research at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem. His main research fields are antisemitism and cyber policies. Topor's most recent book before this one is titled
Why Do People Discriminate Against Jews? (with Jonathan Fox). He has published articles for the
Journal of Advanced Military Studies, the
Journal of Contemporary Antisemitism,
Israel Affairs, and the
International Journal of Cyber Warfare and Terrorism, among others. Additionally, Topor's research on the dark web has won several awards, including the annual Robert Wistrich Award from the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism and an annual award from the Association of Civil-Military Studies in Israel.
Résumé
Phishing for Nazis is an evidence-based, undercover study of neo-Nazi communities on anonymous communication platforms found on the dark web.