Description: Analyzes how espionage operates in the age of rapid technological development, identity politics, plausible deniability, uncertainty and distrust of authority
Review Quotes: "The first substantial book to consider how the digital era will disrupt the business of intelligence, it is destined to become a classic and the gold standard for years to come." --Professor Michael S. Goodman, Head of Department, Department of War Studies, King's College London
"A novel synthesis of intelligence as a crucial tool of statecraft, one increasingly challenged by a crowded information space in which commercial players, other non-state actors and even public opinion may wield power. A topical contribution to the study of the digital age of intelligence." -- Jennifer S. Hunt, Lecturer in Security Studies, Macquarie University"An ambitious, sweeping, post-structuralist analysis of intelligence as practiced in Western liberal democracies today." - CHOICE"An excellent reference point for readers to learn deeper about the intersection of digitization and intelligence." -- Journal of Cyber Policy