Democratizing Violence

ebook The Rise of Open-Source Warfare and the Decline of State Control

By Josh Luberisse

cover image of Democratizing Violence

Sign up to save your library

With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.

   Not today

Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Download Libby on the App Store Download Libby on Google Play

Search for a digital library with this title

Title found at these libraries:

Library Name Distance
Loading...

Democratizing Violence: The Rise of Open-Source Warfare and the Decline of State Control delivers a groundbreaking exploration of how technological innovation, open-source principles, and globalized knowledge sharing are empowering individuals and non-state actors to wield unprecedented destructive power. Drawing on historical case studies, cutting-edge examples of open-source weaponry, and the philosophical underpinnings of warfare, this book offers a comprehensive reassessment of security in the modern age.

From 3D-printed firearms and drone warfare to ransomware-funded insurgencies and cyber mercenaries, this groundbreaking analysis exposes the growing power of non-state actors who now wield military-grade capabilities once reserved for nation-states. With encrypted black markets, Glock switches transforming handguns into machine guns, DIY suppressors, and binary trigger modifications, armed groups and criminal syndicates can now mobilize, finance, and execute sophisticated attacks with unprecedented autonomy.

Drawing from real-world case studies—including the FGC-9 3D-printed gun, the Houthi drone strikes on Saudi oil fields, Mexican cartels using DIY submarines, and the rise of hacked firearms like auto-sear-modified Glocks and 3D-printed silencers—this book dissects how insurgents, rogue states, and cybercriminals exploit cutting-edge tools to challenge global stability. It also explores how criminal organizations and extremist groups leverage satellite imagery, AI-generated deception, and weaponized encryption to evade state control, further eroding traditional security paradigms.

As traditional security models crumble under the weight of open-source warfare, the emergence of improvised nuclear devices (INDs), biohacking threats, and dark-web arms trading networks forces policymakers, law enforcement, and military strategists to confront a future where violence is digitally financed, anonymously executed, and globally interconnected.

Will governments adapt to this new paradigm, or will the world descend into an era where autonomous conflict, decentralized finance, and technological insurgency redefine the rules of war?

Democratizing Violence is an essential read for those seeking to understand the future of warfare, the black-market economy of digital conflict, and the threats posed by an era where the power to wage war is no longer in the hands of the few—but accessible to anyone with an internet connection and the will to fight.

Democratizing Violence