Cyber Disobedience: Re://Presenting Online AnarchyFew activities have captured the contemporary popular imagination as hacking and online activism, from Anonymous and beyond. Few political ideas have gained more notoriety recently than anarchism. Yet both remain misunderstood and much maligned. /Cyber Disobedience/ provides the most engaging and detailed analysis of online civil disobedience and anarchism today. |
Contents
Presenting Anarchy Constructing Fear | |
The Unabomber and the Dawn of | |
Hacker Portrayals | |
Malicious Harmful Intentions and Fearless of Punishment | |
Hacktivism and | |
Foucault Cybercrime | |
Inciting Change through | |
Inciting Change through Struggle | |
A Tentative Dispute | |
Challenging Capital | |
Other editions - View all
Cyber Disobedience: Re://presenting Online Anarchy Jeff Shantz,Jordon Tomblin No preview available - 2014 |
Common terms and phrases
action activists activity age of information agencies Alain Badiou alternative globalization movements anarchism Anonymous Arab Spring argues attacks Badiou black-hat capital capitalist challenge citizens collective communications commons connections contemporary society content analysis context corporate creative crime criminal culture cyber anarchists cyber disobedience cybercrime cyberspace Despite disciplinary power Dyer-Witheford elites enclosure engage ethical example Facebook film forms freedom global North hacking hacktivism hacktivist group hacktivists Hakim Bey harmful ideas illegal infrastructures of resistance James McTeigue knowledge law enforcement legislation malicious means metadata Negri neoliberal networks organizing Oxblood Ruffin period perspective political portrayal of hackers portrayed potential practices production protest Red Scare revealed revolution revolutionary seeking Shantz social struggle suggests Summer and Halpin surveillance Swordfish target terror terrorist theory threat Unabomber Vendetta WarGames websites whistleblowing white-hat hacker WikiLeaks