Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

How Terrorists Attract Lone Wolf Attackers

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 11 Oct, 2014 11:17 PM
    Magazines of some of the world's most dreaded terrorist organisations are experimenting with strategies to increase motivation for lone wolf attacks, new research has found.
     
    Inspire, an online magazine reportedly published by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, is experimenting with using gamification (the use of gaming ideas such as levels of achievement and competition) strategies to attract lone-wolf attacks, the findings showed.
     
    The study analysed the language used in two magazines to gain intelligence about terrorist strategy.
     
    "The payoff from understanding how all this works is that intelligence and law enforcement analysts can get insight into what the 'bad guys' are doing from the speeches and documents that they produce, often for other purposes," said researcher David Skillicorn, a professor at the Queen's University in Canada
     
    For the study, Skillicorn examined the language used in Inspire and the Islamic State News published by the Islamic State (IS).
     
    "Jihadist language intensity has been steadily increasing over the past few issues of Inspire, after being much more stable during the Anwar al-Awlaki years," Skillicorn stressed.
     
    Anwar al-Awlaki was a senior talent recruiter for Al Qaeda.
     
    The intellectual level of these magazines is comparable to other mass market magazines - they aren't particularly simplistic and they assume a reasonably well educated readership, the study noted.
     
    The findings appeared in the journal Security Informatics.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Coffee And Kittens: Cat Cafe In Montreal Claims To Be North America's First

    Coffee And Kittens: Cat Cafe In Montreal Claims To Be North America's First
    A new Montreal cafe is hoping plenty of people do. The Cafe des Chats, which opened its doors on Saturday, is a lot like a regular coffee house — except it's home to eight cats.

    Coffee And Kittens: Cat Cafe In Montreal Claims To Be North America's First

    Three People In Custody After Police Search A Nanaimo Home

    Three People In Custody After Police Search A Nanaimo Home
    NANAIMO, B.C. - Two men and a woman are in custody after RCMP in Nanaimo, B.C., searched a house that had stolen firearms and other property inside.

    Three People In Custody After Police Search A Nanaimo Home

    B.C. Teachers' Dispute: Mediator Walks Away, Ending Hopes Strike Will End Before School Starts

    B.C. Teachers' Dispute: Mediator Walks Away, Ending Hopes Strike Will End Before School Starts
    RICHMOND, B.C. - Veteran mediator Vince Ready has walked away from talks between British Columbia teachers and their employer, smothering parents' hopes the school year will start on time.

    B.C. Teachers' Dispute: Mediator Walks Away, Ending Hopes Strike Will End Before School Starts

    Car And Bus Collide On Vancouver Bridge, But No One Injured

    Car And Bus Collide On Vancouver Bridge, But No One Injured
    Const. Brian Montague says no one was injured in the accident and says officers probably will not investigate the collision because no people were hurt.

    Car And Bus Collide On Vancouver Bridge, But No One Injured

    Almost Half Of Those Taken To Hospitals After Bus Crash In B.c. Released

    Almost Half Of Those Taken To Hospitals After Bus Crash In B.c. Released
    MERRITT, B.C. - Almost half of the passengers taken to hospitals after a tour bus flipped over on a British Columbia highway have been released.

    Almost Half Of Those Taken To Hospitals After Bus Crash In B.c. Released

    Culture Shock For Some Aboriginals Who Join The Canadian Armed Forces

    OTTAWA - The move from small and isolated communities to larger urban centres can be quite jarring for aboriginals who join the Canadian Armed Forces, says a newly released document.

    Culture Shock For Some Aboriginals Who Join The Canadian Armed Forces