The internet was once imagined as a space for open exchange, but it has also become a battleground for influence. The Propaganda Network examines how state actors, private contractors, and opaque funding groups have used digital platforms to shape narratives, amplify division, and steer public opinion at scale.
The book traces coordinated information campaigns across social media, messaging apps, and news ecosystems, drawing on investigative reports, leaked documents, and academic research into disinformation networks. It explores how content is produced, distributed, and amplified, often in ways that are difficult for users to detect or trace.
This is an investigation into modern information warfare and the systems that support it. It shows how persuasion has been industrialized in the digital age, and how attention itself has become a strategic resource. |