ISIS outperforms peers, uses social media to attract followers
Terrorist organizations have
exploited the internet with its means of communication, through which they have
been able to recruit and attract new followers, using it in their unconventional
wars by broadcasting their media materials with the aim of propagation and
intimidation.
Cyber wars
The weapons of cyber warfare varied
between information, videos and images, using a number of software that allow
actors to identify and analyze the trends and tendencies of others on social
networking sites, as well as monitor their overall movements in this virtual
world to know the capabilities of the opponent and develop a strategy of
attack, leading to the use of hashtags in a way that favors one group over the
other.
The media system of ISIS has
developed greatly in terms of content and form, with its Al-Furqan media
institution considered the oldest. Many other media organizations affiliated
with ISIS have also appeared, such as the Al-Istisam Foundation, the Al-Hayat
Center, Amaq, Al-Battar, Dabiq Media Corporation, Al-Khilafa, Ajned Media
Production, Al-Ghuraba Media, Al-Isra Media Production, Al-Saqeel, Al-Wafaa,
Naseem Audio Production, and a group of news agencies of the states and territories
under the terrorist organization’s control, in addition to a number of
magazines in Arabic and English, such as Dabiq and Al-Shamkha magazines, as
well as local newspapers, such as Al-Bayan, which was broadcast from Mosul,
Iraq and Raqqa, Syria. ISIS also created various blogs to continue its media
activity. The most important blogs were in both Russian and English languages,
but were also translated into many foreign languages.
ISIS supremacy
ISIS realized the importance of
using social networking sites in its quest to achieve its goals, relying mainly
on Twitter and YouTube, and it developed a media strategy on these sites, as it
did not leave any technical means to interact on these sites except that it
penetrated them. The organization shared high-quality videos and movies,
developed its own applications, and resorted to inventing different methods and
mechanisms that depend on the various loopholes in those sites to find ways to
enable it to recover its accounts, which the Global Coalition to Combat ISIS
sought to delete.
Despite the proactiveness of several
organizations in using social media, ISIS was a forerunner in dealing with it
and spreading within it quickly to attract a large segment of its supporters,
as it was able to outperform other terrorist organizations with regard to the
use and development of social networks as a key tool to creating and promoting
its extremist ideas.
According to a study by the
Brookings Institution, the main and official accounts that support ISIS
amounted to about 46,000 accounts until the end of 2014. The study noted that
there are at least 90,000 accounts through which the organization publishes its
messages, and most of these accounts post about 50 times per day, while each
account has an average of 1,004 followers.