http://tinyurl.com/23exkco


Al Qaeda Looks to Make New 'Friends' -- on Facebook


By Jana Winter

Published December 09, 2010

| FoxNews.com

This Facebook page, which appears in the DHS
report, shows a recipe for preparing nitric acid, an
ingredient used to make bombs

DHS

This Facebook page, which appears in the DHS report, shows a recipe for
preparing nitric acid, an ingredient used to make bombs

EXCLUSIVE: If you're on Facebook, Al Qaeda wants to friend you. 

Terrorist groups are using Facebook to share operational information and to
target, recruit and radicalize members of the general public, according to a
Department of Homeland Security report obtained by FoxNews.com.

The DHS report, "Terrorist Use of Social Networking Sites: Facebook Case
Study," notes while terrorists have been using social networking sites for
quite some time, their strategies for exploiting Facebook have evolved and
that they have learned "the inherent value in exploiting a non-ideological
medium."

According to the November report, terrorists and jihadists use Facebook as: 

- a way to share operational and tactical information, including bomb
recipes and weapons maintenance;

- a gateway to extremist forums; 

- a media outlet for propaganda; 

- a source of remote reconnaissance for targeting purposes.

"Every person who connects to the Internet with a computer needs to take
this issue seriously," says Steve Graham, senior director for EC Council, a
cybersecurity certification membership organization. "Reports like this show
we are figuratively sitting next to terrorists. So are our friends, our kids
and anyone else who types www. <http://www.%E2%80%9D> " 

DHS found that among the materials available to Facebook's more than 500
million members are:

- Informational videos titled "tactical shooting," "getting to know your
AK-47" and "how to field strip an AK-47." Those videos can be found on the
page of a radical public Facebook group that is dedicated to jihad and has
more than 2,000 members.

- A group discussion page featuring Arabic-language IED recipes for
explosive ammonia and poisonous smoke bombs, and instructions on how to
prepare nitric acid, which is used to make explosive mixtures. The same
recipes were also posted on a radical forum, suggesting "some cross-over
between radical content disseminated on Facebook and on Islamist extremist
forums," according to the report.

Some radical Islamist forums also maintain Facebook pages. "In this way,
Facebook acts as a gateway or launching pad for further radicalization and
for easy access to sites where explosives recipes and IED information are
regularly posted," the report says. 

While DHS notes that Facebook is not the only social networking site
employed by extremists, its report cites discussion threads collected from
well-established radical forums that indicate jihadists are specifically
targeting the site:

This [Facebook] is a great idea, and better than the forums. Instead of
waiting for people to [come to you so you can] inform them, you go to them
and teach them! 

God willing, the mujahedeen, their supporters, and proud jihadi journalists
will [use the site, too]. [First,] it has become clear that the market of
social networking websites is developing in an astonishing manner and that
it fulfills important needs for Internet users, particularly younger ones.
[Second,] Facebook has become very successful in this field; therefore, it
is our duty to use it, as adherents of jihad and [members] of the blessed
jihadi media.

[I] mean, if you have a group of 5,000 people, with the press of a button
you [can] send them a standardized message. [That] means if you send one
message with a link to [forum names], a clear [path] to jihadi media is
open.

I entreat you, by God, to begin registering for Facebook as soon as you
[finish] reading this post. Familiarize yourselves with it. This post is a
seed and a beginning, to be followed by serious efforts to optimize our
Facebook usage. Let's start distributing Islamic jihadi publications, posts,
articles, and pictures. Let's anticipate a reward from the Lord of the
Heavens, dedicate our purpose to God, and help our colleagues.

One forum user outlined "General Goals of the Invasion": 

1. Reach the wide base of Muslims who [use] Facebook.
2. Encourage brothers to devise new online media in support of jihadi media.
3. Form a solid base on Facebook and shed light on it as a medium for
reaching people.
4. Move from an elite society ([on] jihadi forums and websites) to
mainstream Muslims, [encourage] their participation, and interact with them.
5. Advance media operations and encourage creativity, innovation,
flexibility, and change. Reach large [numbers] of Crusaders, broadcast the
losses of their armies, expose the lies of their leaders, and call Muslims
to jihad.

"These posts call for the organized, strategic exploitation of Facebook,
recognizing its value as a platform for reaching a wider, younger audience,"
the report states.

Posters recognize that forums are visited by already-radicalized jihadi
supporters, "whereas Facebook offers a space to interact with "mainstream
Muslims" and attract and recruit new supporters." 

"[S]ocial networking interfaces whose purpose is to virtually connect people
based on such common social bonds clearly lend themselves to extremist use
and recruitment efforts," the report states.

Other posts demonstrate security savvy by recommending the use of proxy
servers to provide anonymity, while others show strategy employed to recruit
new members.

A "concerning factor here is the speed at which an entire demographic can be
located and communicated with," Graham said. "DHS mentions the use of social
media to find groups with similar interests.

"Fact is, what used to take months to get a few recruits who meet the right
criteria is now on a harvested mailing list. Groups are being communicated
to in the hundreds, speeding up recruiting efforts."

Jihadists use cyber propaganda material to target youths on Facebook, said
Jeff Bardin, chief security strategist at security firm XA Systems. 

"The youth who come to Facebook looking for jihadist information are the
Generation X and Y youth who also don't worry too much about the security of
their profiles and what they post, providing easy prey for intelligence
agencies worldwide to access, infiltrate and fully penetrate those wishing
to learn," he said.

Facebook tries to filter out terrorist activity by checking for names of
terrorists and terrorist organizations provided by the State and Treasury
Departments. 

The DHS report states:

"According to Facebook Rights and Responsibilities on the website, 'You will
not post content or take any action on Facebook that infringes or violates
someone else's rights or otherwise violates the law.' It also states that
'We can remove any content or information you post on Facebook if we believe
that it violates this Statement.' However, information is not screened
before it is posted, so posts that violate the rules remain on the site
until they are detected and removed."

Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes told FoxNews.com:

"We take our Statement of Rights and Responsibilities very seriously and
react quickly to reports of inappropriate content and behavior. Groups that
threaten violence towards people are taken down, as are groups that express
hatred towards individuals and those sponsored by recognized terrorist
organizations. The goal of these policies is to strike a very delicate
balance between giving people the freedom to express their opinions and
viewpoints - even those that may be controversial to some - and maintaining
a safe and trusted environment."

DHS spokesman Bobby Whithorne provided FoxNews.com with this statement:

"The Office for Bombing Prevention (OBP) facilitates a constant feedback
loop with our law enforcement partners on TRIPwire, and as a result of
ongoing discussions on the topic, OBP developed a case study on the use of
social networking sites to better inform our partners about techniques,
tactics and procedures used by terrorists. It is well known that terrorists
recruit and share instructions to develop improvised explosive devices
online, and we will continue to provide situational awareness and share
information with our law enforcement partners on a range of topics in our
shared efforts to deter and disrupt terrorism."



Read more:
<http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/12/09/facebook-friends-terror/#ixzz17dO
58TVr>
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/12/09/facebook-friends-terror/#ixzz17dO5
8TVr

 

 



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