Search for: "Lennart Maschmeyer" Results 1 - 10 of 10
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28 Jan 2023, 7:42 am by Jacob Katz Cogan
Contents include: Henning Tamm & Allard Duursma, Combat, commitment, and the termination of Africa’s mutual interventions Iosif Kovras, Technologies of justice: forensics and the evolution of transitional justice Chiara Ruffa & Sebastiaan Rietjens, Meaning making in peacekeeping missions: mandate interpretation and multinational collaboration in the UN mission in Mali Lennart Maschmeyer, Subversion, cyber operations, and reverse structural power in world politics… [read post]
6 Aug 2022, 5:01 am by Benjamin Pollard
Lennart Maschmeyer responded to a Lawfare post critiquing his theory on the “subversive trilemma” of cyber operations. [read post]
4 Aug 2022, 1:13 pm by Benjamin Pollard
ICYMI: Yesterday on Lawfare Lennart Maschmeyer responded to a Lawfare post critiquing his theory on the “subversive trilemma” of cyber operations. [read post]
15 Jul 2022, 2:25 pm by Matt Gluck
  Lennart Maschmeyer asserted that although cyber operations have substantial strategic promise, they are limited by trade-offs related to operational speed, the significance of their effects, and the extent to which they can be controlled. [read post]
15 Jul 2022, 11:25 am by Hyemin Han
ICYMI: Yesterday on Lawfare Jason Healy responded to Lennart Maschmeyer’s Lawfare article earlier this week, arguing that Maschmeyer’s analysis of a “subversive trilemma” overestimates the impact of subversion. [read post]
14 Jul 2022, 5:01 am by Jason Healey
Specifically, Lennart Maschmeyer argues, in his International Security article and associated Lawfare post, that cyber operations are subject to a “subversive trilemma” of speed, intensity, and control that limits their strategic utility. [read post]
13 Jul 2022, 1:29 pm by Benjamin Pollard
Lennart Maschmeyer argued that cyber operations are constrained practically by an operational trilemma—emanating from trade-offs in operation speed, intensity, and degree of control—that limits their strategic value. [read post]
2 Mar 2022, 5:01 am by Ciaran Martin
In an article for War on the Rocks, Lennart Maschmeyer and Nadiya Kostyuk make a very interesting case that for all the sophistication and intensity of the Russian cyber campaign against Ukraine since 2014—a period in which Ukraine has become “Russia’s cyber playground,” with energy outages, the disruption of government and banking payments, and the harassment of Ukrainian business and civic society—it has been a failure. [read post]
7 Mar 2020, 7:53 am by Elliot Setzer
Patja Howell shared an episode of the Lawfare Podcast discussing clickbait videos and influence campaigns with Lisa Kaplan and Sophie Lawton of Alethea Group, an organization working to detect and mitigate social media disinformation: Stewart Baker shared an episode of the Cyberlaw Podcast featuring an interview with Daphne Keller, Director of the Program on Platform Regulation at Stanford University’s Cyber Policy Center: Lennart Maschmeyer argued that the U.S. offensive… [read post]
5 Mar 2020, 12:06 pm by Elliot Setzer
Lennart Maschmeyer argued that the U.S. offensive cyber strategy of persistent engagement rests on faulty assumptions that compromise the success of the strategy. [read post]