IWar

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iWar is the term used by NATO to describe a form of Internet-based warfare.[1]

iWar comparisons

iWar is distinct from cyber-warfare, cyber-terrorism and information warfare. These refer to sensitive military and critical infrastructure assets, and to battlefield communications and satellite intelligence. iWar refers to attacks carried out over the Internet that target the consumer Internet infrastructure, for example: websites that provide access to online services.[1]

iWar attack

iWar is conducted by a denial-of-service attack, which bombards a high volume of information requests to overwhelm a computer or networking system on the Internet.

iWar in the future

The two trends of increasing vulnerability over the Internet and ease of attack make conflagration of iWar probable.

2008 Russia-Georgian conflict

The 2008 South Ossetia war heralded the arrival of iWar.[2]

See also

References

Further reading

  • Wang, Xiangsui et al. (2002). Unrestricted Warfare: China's Master Plan to Destroy America. Pan American Publishing Company. ISBN 097168072
  • Ventre Daniel (2009). Information Warfare. Wiley ISTE. ISBN 978-1-84821-094-3
  • Ventre Daniel (2011). Cyberwar and Information Warfare. Wiley ISTE.

External links


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