"Information warfare is a kind of warfare where information and attacks on information and its system are used as a tool of warfare. Information warfare may include giving the enemy propaganda to convince them to give up, and denying them information that might lead to their resistance. Information warfare may also include feeding propaganda or even disinformation to one's own population, either to build support for the war effort or to counter enemy propaganda." - Wikipedia, 12-30-2005 at 2:05pm
Documents- Background Paper Presentation - The IWAR Range: a Laboratory for Undergraduate Information Assurance Education
- Research Paper Presentation - Transaction Fusion in the Wake of Information Warfare
- Homework
- Transaction fusion in the wake of information warfare, Brajendra Panda, Rajesh Yalamanchili. March 2001. Proceedings of the 2001 ACM symposium on Applied computing.
- The IWAR range: a laboratory for undergraduate information assurance education, Joseph Schafer, Daniel J. Ragsdale, John R. Surdu, Curtis A. Carver. April 2001. Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges. Proceedings of the sixth annual CCSC northeastern conference on The journal of computing in small colleges. Volume 16 Issue 4.
- Emerging technologies for homeland security: Countering terrorism through information technology, Robert Popp, Thomas Armour, Ted Senator, Kristen Numrych. March 2004. Communications of the ACM,Ê Volume 47 Issue 3.