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openclaw skills install likewar-the-weaponization-of-social-mediaP.W. Singer and Emerson Brooking's 'LikeWar: The Weaponization of Social Media' — how social media has become a battlefield. From Trump's tweets to ISIS propaganda, from Russian election interference to viral misinformation. The war for attention, influence, and truth. How a like is a weapon, a share is a strategy, and the internet is the new front line.
openclaw skills install likewar-the-weaponization-of-social-mediaOn first load, the AI must proactively present this guide.
Welcome to LikeWar! This is P.W. Singer and Emerson Brooking's essential guide to how social media has been weaponized. From the Islamic State's sophisticated online propaganda to Russian interference in US elections, from Trump's Twitter mastery to the rise of conspiracy theories — social media has become a battlefield. When you want to understand how information warfare works, how algorithms amplify division, or how truth itself is under attack, this is the definitive account.
Social Media Is a Battlefield. Likes, shares, and retweets are not just engagement metrics. They are weapons in an information war. Every user is both a soldier and a target.
Attention Is the New Resource. Whoever commands attention wins. The most outrageous content gets the most attention. Algorithms optimize for engagement, which means they optimize for conflict and outrage.
Truth Is the First Casualty. The speed and scale of social media make it impossible to separate truth from falsehood. A lie can circle the globe before the truth puts on its shoes.
Anyone Can Be an Influencer. You do not need a media empire to shape public opinion. A single person with a smartphone can reach millions. This is both liberating and dangerous.
The Algorithms Are Not Neutral. Platforms are designed to maximize engagement. Engagement is driven by emotion. Emotion is driven by conflict. The system is wired for division.
Social Media Is a Force Multiplier. Small groups can have outsized impact. ISIS used Twitter to recruit globally. Russian trolls used Facebook to sway an election. A few people can change the world.
The War Never Ends. There is no ceasefire in the information war. It is constant. The only defense is awareness, critical thinking, and understanding the game being played.
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P.W. Singer: Political scientist and author. Expert on modern warfare. Author of Ghost Fleet, Wired for War, and Cybersecurity and Cyberwar. Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Emerson Brooking: Journalist and researcher at the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensics Lab. Expert on disinformation and social media.
Key Concepts:
Chapter 1: The War Begins. Trump's first tweet in 2009. The evolution of social media from casual platform to battlefield.
Chapter 3: The Islamic State's Online Empire. How ISIS used Twitter to recruit, radicalize, and spread propaganda. Their sophisticated media operation.
Chapter 5: The Russian Hacking. Russian interference in the 2016 election. The troll farm in St. Petersburg. The coordinated disinformation campaign.
Chapter 7: The Algorithm Problem. How social media algorithms amplify extreme content. Why outrage is the most shareable emotion.
[Before sharing any story on social media, pause and check the source. Ask: who created this and why?]
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8 chapters plus introduction and conclusion. The book traces the evolution of social media weaponization from its early days to the present. Each chapter covers a different aspect: the rise of Trump, the ISIS online empire, Russian interference, the algorithm problem, deepfakes, and the future of information warfare.
Donald Trump's use of Twitter was unprecedented. He bypassed traditional media to speak directly to millions. His tweets were designed to dominate the news cycle, attack opponents, and rally supporters. Trump understood the power of attention instinctively. His tweets were weapons.
ISIS built the most sophisticated propaganda operation of any non-state actor. They used Twitter, YouTube, Telegram, and encrypted apps to recruit fighters, spread ideology, and project power. Their videos were professionally produced. Their messaging was consistent. They understood the social media battlefield better than most governments.
In 2016, Russian operatives ran a coordinated disinformation campaign targeting the US election. They created fake accounts, spread divisive content, organized real-world events, and amplified existing social tensions. The operation was sophisticated and effective. It exposed the vulnerability of democratic systems to information warfare.
Social media algorithms are designed to maximize engagement. They show users content that generates the strongest reactions. Outrage, fear, and anger are the most engaging emotions. The algorithms amplify division because division drives engagement. This is not a bug. It is a feature.
The book looks ahead to the next generation of information warfare: deepfakes (realistic AI-generated video), automated bot networks, and increasingly sophisticated disinformation campaigns. The tools are getting better. The defenses are not keeping up.
The book offers practical advice: diversify your news sources, check sources before sharing, understand algorithmic bias, think critically about emotional content, and be aware of your own confirmation bias.
Memes are not just jokes. They are tools of information warfare. Memes can spread ideas faster than text. They are hard to counter because they are humorous and shareable. Both ISIS and Russian trolls used memes as part of their propaganda strategies.
Automated bot accounts make up a significant portion of social media traffic. They can amplify messages, create the illusion of consensus, and target vulnerable users. Bots were used extensively in the 2016 election to spread disinformation and suppress turnout.
The book covers the role of whistleblowers like Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning, whose disclosures changed how the public understands surveillance and information warfare. Their leaks were themselves acts of information warfare.
Platforms face an impossible choice: police content and be accused of censorship, or allow everything and be accused of spreading disinformation. Singer and Brooking explore this dilemma. There is no easy answer. The platforms created the battlefield. Now they must decide how to manage it.
The book examines Cambridge Analytica, the data firm that harvested Facebook data to target political ads. This was a watershed moment in the understanding of social media weaponization.