Memetic warfareis a modern type ofinformation warfareandpsychological warfareinvolving the propagation ofmemesonsocial media.While different, memetic warfare shares similarities with traditionalpropagandaandmisinformationtactics, developing into a more common tool used by government institutions and other groups to influencepublic opinion.

History

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The concept of memetics derives from the book "The Selfish Gene" (1976) byRichard Dawkins,being defined as a non-genetic means of transferring information from one individual to another.[1]

Over time, the term "meme" became commonly understood as an image, text, video or other transferrable form of digital information, typically spread for the purpose of humor.

Memetics: A Growth Industry in US Military operationswas published in 2005 by Michael Prosser, now aLieutenant Colonelin theMarine Corps.He proposed the creation of a 'Meme Warfare Center'.[2]

InEvolutionary Psychology, Memes and the Origin of War(2006),Keith Hensondefined memes as "replicating information patterns: ways to do things, learned elements of culture, beliefs or ideas."

Memetic warfare has been seriously studied as an important concept with respects to information warfare byNATO's Strategic Communications Centre of Excellence.Jeff Giesea,writing in NATO's Stratcom COE Defense Strategic Communications journal, defines memetic warfare as "competition over narrative, ideas, and social control in a social-media battlefield. One might think of it as a subset of 'information operations' tailored to social media. Information operations involve the collection and dissemination of information to establish a competitive advantage over an opponent".[3][4] According to Jacob Siegel, "Memes appear to function like the IEDs of information warfare. They are natural tools of aninsurgency;great for blowing things up, but likely to sabotage the desired effects when handled by the larger actor in an asymmetric conflict. "[5]

TheTaiwanesegovernment andAudrey Tang,its Minister of Digital Affairs, announced their intention to installmemetic engineeringteams in government to respond todisinformationefforts using a “humor over rumor” approach. The stated purpose of this approach is primarily to counter Chinesepolitical warfareefforts and domestic disinformation.[6]

Examples of Memetic Warfare

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The Russian Annexation of Crimea, 2014

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Evidence of memetic warfare and other applications ofcyber-attacksaidingRussiain their efforts to annexCrimeahas been made apparent by reports of roughly 19 million dollars being spent to fund "troll farms"andbot accountsby the Russian government.[7]The intention of this campaign was to spread pro-Russian sentiment on social media platforms, particularly targeting the ethnically Russian populations living within Crimea. This event is widely considered to be Russia's proof of concept for modern information warfare, and serves as a template for future instances of memetic warfare.[8]

United States presidential election, 2016

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Memetic warfare on the part of4chanandr/The_Donaldsub-redditis widely credited with assistingDonald Trumpin winning the election in an event they call 'The Great Meme War'. According to Ben Schreckinger, "a group of anonymous keyboard commandos conquered the internet for Donald Trump—and plans to deliver Europe to the far right."[9]

In a 2018 study, a team that analyzed a 160M image dataset discovered that the 4chan message board/pol/and sub-reddit r/The_Donald were particularly effective at spreading memes. They found that /pol/ substantially influenced the meme ecosystem by posting a large number of memes, while r/The_Donald was the most efficient community in pushing memes to both fringe and mainstream web communities.[10]

References within Fiction

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In fiction, the 2002 gameTranshuman Spacepresented the world of 2100 as having "memetics"as a key technology, and the 2004 expansion" Transhuman Space: Toxic Memes "gave examples of" memetic warfare agents ".[11]

References

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  1. ^Dawkins, Richard (1981).The selfish gene(Repr. with corr ed.). Oxford: Oxford Univ. Pr.ISBN978-0-19-857519-1.
  2. ^Prosser, Michael.Memetics-A Growth Industry in US Military Operations(PDF)(MSc). United States Marine Corps.Archived(PDF)from the original on 19 February 2018.
  3. ^Giesea, Jeff(Winter 2015)."Academic journal" Defence Strategic Communications "Vol1 | StratCom".Defence Strategic Communications.1(1): 67–75.
  4. ^"What is memetic warfare and how it threats democratic values? - European Endowment For Democracy: EED".democracyendowment.eu.
  5. ^Siegel, Jacob (31 January 2017)."Is America Prepared for Meme Warfare?".Vice Motherboard.
  6. ^Blanchette, Jude; Livingston, Scott; Glaser, Bonnie S.; Kennedy, Scott."Protecting Democracy in an Age of Disinformation"(PDF).csis-website-prod.s3.amazonaws.Center for Strategic and International Studies.Retrieved30 January2021.
  7. ^Duggan, Patrick. "HARNESSING CYBER-TECHNOLOGY'S HUMAN POTENTIAL."Special Warfare,vol. 28, no. 4, Oct.-Dec. 2015, pp. 12+.Gale Academic OneFile,link.gale /apps/doc/A560416624/AONE?u=a04fu&sid=googleScholar&xid=6321145f. Accessed 20 Nov. 2024.
  8. ^"How Russia Weaponized Social Media in Crimea".The Strategy Bridge.2017-05-10.Retrieved2024-11-20.
  9. ^Schreckinger, Ben (March–April 2017)."World War Meme".Politico Magazine.RetrievedJanuary 2,2019.
  10. ^On the Origins of Memes by Means of Fringe Web Communities. Savvas Zannettou, Tristan Caulfield, Jeremy Blackburn, Emiliano De Cristofaro, Michael Sirivianos, Gianluca Stringhini, Guillermo Suarez-Tangil. ACM Internet Measurement Conference (IMC), 2018.31 October 2018. pp. 188–202.doi:10.1145/3278532.3278550.ISBN9781450356190.S2CID44180791.
  11. ^Cascio, Jamais (April 2004).Transhuman Space: Toxic Memes.Steve Jackson Games. p. 28.ISBN978-1-55634-726-9.Archived fromthe originalon June 2, 2016.Retrieved2017-10-12.The Unified Way is a cult of persistent popularity across Asia and into the Middle East. It is also a memetic warfare agent, a leftover from the buildup to the Pacific War that may well cause more damage than all of the dormant AKVs in orbit.Alt URL

Further reading

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