ABSTRACT

Cyber hate is understood as being the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to promote hate and to target the largely youthful and impressionable audiences that increasingly rely on these technologies. Hate-groups achieve their goals in four main ways: promoting ideology, promoting hatred of other racial or religious groups, exerting control over others and targeting opponents. Cyber terrorism is considered in this chapter broadly as being the use of information technologies to promote terrorism and to achieve terrorist goals. This may be through attacking the infrastructure of the web through viruses, hacking and so on, or through use of technology to organize terror attacks. Of interest then is the psychological aspect of the ways in which communication through ICTs differs from other modes of communication. It returns to the central issue facing those who try to theories and challenge hate and terrorism on the Internet; this is the problem of defining the psychology of people who are essentially invisible'.