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Cashing In On Cyberpower How Interdependent Actors Seek Economic Outcomes In A Digital World Mark T Peters Ii

  • SKU: BELL-10556590
Cashing In On Cyberpower How Interdependent Actors Seek Economic Outcomes In A Digital World Mark T Peters Ii
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Cashing In On Cyberpower How Interdependent Actors Seek Economic Outcomes In A Digital World Mark T Peters Ii instant download after payment.

Publisher: Potomac Books/University Of Nebraska Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.21 MB
Pages: 281
Author: Mark T. Peters II
ISBN: 9781640120136, 9781640120532, 1640120130, 164012053X
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

Cashing In On Cyberpower How Interdependent Actors Seek Economic Outcomes In A Digital World Mark T Peters Ii by Mark T. Peters Ii 9781640120136, 9781640120532, 1640120130, 164012053X instant download after payment.

As the world has become increasingly digitally interconnected, military leaders and other actors are ditching symmetric power strategies in favor of cyberstrategies. Cyberpower enables actors to change actual economic outcomes without the massive resource investment required for military force deployments. Cashing In on Cyberpower addresses the question, Why and to what end are state and nonstate actors using cybertools to influence economic outcomes? The most devastating uses of cyberpower can include intellectual property theft, espionage to uncover carefully planned trade strategies, and outright market manipulation through resource and currency values. Offering eight hypotheses to address this central question, Mark T. Peters II considers every major cyberattack (almost two hundred) over the past ten years, providing both a quick reference and a comparative analysis. He also develops new case studies depicting the 2010 intellectual property theft of a gold-detector design from the Australian Codan corporation, the 2012 trade negotiation espionage in the Japanese Trans-Pacific Partnership preparations, and the 2015 cyberattacks on Ukrainian SCADA systems. All these hypotheses combine to identify new data and provide a concrete baseline of how leaders use cybermeans to achieve economic outcomes.

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