Honorary degree awarded to DCU Professor Luiz Moutinho
DCU Business School Professor Luiz Moutinho was awarded an honourary degree at a University in Macedonia this week, calling it the “highest accolade an academic can receive”. Read more…
DCU Business School Professor Luiz Moutinho was awarded an honourary degree at a University in Macedonia this week, calling it the “highest accolade an academic can receive”. Read more…
Lucy Mangan looks into mental health services provided by primary and secondary schools, arguing that there are not enough resources available for those seeking help. Read more…
A School of Law and Government professor has granted a President’s Award for Research for her “outstanding contribution” to research in the field of cyberterrorism.
Maura Conway, who heads the DCU-led VOX-Pol research network, described her win as a great feeling, saying: “It’s always good when we get people in humanities, the social sciences having their research recognised.”
Conway has been researching cyberterrorism since the late 90’s, after she developed an interest in exploring the link between globalisation and terrorism. “That was as far as I got with it,” she said, “because i became really taken with this idea of terrorism and the internet and what direction it was going.”
At the time the scholarly idea of what cyberterrorism would be was “an attack on or using the internet for terrorism purposes,” she said. “I’m a bit of a skeptic in that regard.”
Instead Conway thought “the use of the internet for outreach and propaganda by violent extremists” would be much more likely, and that’s how things have played out, she said.
“Terrorists use the internet like everyone else,” Conway said. “They’re especially aware that young people are very heavy internet users… young people between the ages of 16 to 30 are the most important demographic for extremist organisations.They seek to reach other people like themselves using the technology they use in their lives every day.”
Conway pointed to the Islamic State, who “really ran with social media… to reach out beyond the countries in which they have a major physical presence, and to influence people around the globe to either travel to their location or to carry out attacks on their behalf.”
Conway warns that “it’s mistaken to believe the use of the internet for radicalisation purposes is restricted to violent jihadis.” The extreme right in Europe are “worth keeping an eye on,” she said – “they’ve been doing their politics online since the early 1980s so they’ve been very well placed to use the internet to further their purposes.”
Traditional cyberattacks – the spreading of viruses, the hacking of systems – will remain an activity practiced by nation states rather than terrorists, Conway predicts.
It’s a question of resources – it’s cheaper to make and plant a bomb than train a team of hackers – and it attracts more attention.
“The Boston bombings got massively more attention than the Stuxnet virus attack on Iran’s nuclear programs,” she said. “Terrorists do cost-benefit analyses.”
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The amount of money students spend on food is ever increasing, so it is essential when eating out that we get the best value for our money and take advantage of the offers to be Read more…
Following the incorporation of St Patrick’s College, Mater Dei Institute of Education and Church of Ireland College of Education with DCU, Bríon Hoban discusses the aftermath of the incorporation from a St. Pat’s perspective. Read more…
When we think of singer/songwriters with around 11,000 monthly listeners on Spotify we tend not to imagine 20-year-olds still studying in college. LAOISE isn’t like most 20 year olds. Sitting in a quirky city-centre café, Read more…
When one hears the word grime, we immediately think of Dizzee Rascal, Wiley and Lethal Bizzle – the usual suspects. However, anyone thinking the original prophets of British grime will bring the genre to the Read more…
Girls aged between twelve and seventeen are the most likely victims of online sexual exploitation according to Detective Superintendent Declan Daly in DCU, last Monday.
DCU International Office moved to All Hallows’ College campus this week, as part of a range of changes taking place throughout the incorporation year.
There’s a soft laugh over the phone. “Yeah, I guess we’re perfectionists in one way,” Stevie Darragh of Overhead, The Albatross tells me. That much is clear. It’s that perfectionism that allowed the Dublin instrumentalists Read more…
DCU Dóchas Éireann 0-16 St. Patrick’s College 1-04 O’Connor Cup quarter-final The DCU Senior ladies’ Gaelic football team has qualified for O’Connor Cup weekend after a strong display saw them overcome local rivals St. Patrick’s Read more…
According to Aristotle; At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice, he is the worst. In the mire, which carpets the underbelly of the sex trade, in the Read more…
The subject of the Eighth Amendment has been one which has gained mass amount of attention over the last year especially. It has been discussed and then discussed again as everyone passionately exclaims their postulations, Read more…
On Wednesday the 22nd of February, the Trump administration made the decision to withdraw the guidance that permitted transgender students to use the bathroom of the gender they identify with. The decision was met with Read more…
Just a few weeks ago, DCU saw the establishment of an over the phone counselling service. An exclusive for DCU students, the helpline will operate for three hours, two nights a week – every Tuesday Read more…
Increased industrialisation and production is linked to higher levels of pollution, and still society continues its industrial and urban growth, producing more greenhouse gases and hazardous waste year after year.
Trinity College’s proposed purchase of Iveagh Grounds sports facility is set to save a number of sports clubs from relocation according to the chairman of the Guinness Athletic Union.
Sexually active students are advised to avail of DCU’s free testing for sexually transmitted infections (STI’s) due to an increase of Chlamydia sufferers, according to the HSE.
The number of students applying to study in the UK has dropped by about 20% since the Brexit vote in 2016.
DCU Chaplain Philip McKinley admits the role he holds has shifted in recent years for various reasons. Read more…
Sticks and stones may break my bones, but names can never hurt me; perhaps that used to be true. Or, perhaps it applied to a time before technology invaded safe spaces, before the insidious nature Read more…
On Saturday the 25th of February, viewers of BBC talent show ‘Let It Shine’ saw boyband Five To Five be crowned the winners, with each member landing a lead role in Take That singer-songwriter Gary Read more…
Secrets, lies, heartbreak and family drama – just some of the factors that make up the spine of any teen TV series, and Riverdale is no exception. Almost a year in the making, Riverdale is Read more…
As everyone knows, it’s our national duty to go out and have fun on March 17th. Avoidance of this sacred tradition is tantamount to high treason. Yet maybe wading through a sea of puke Read more…
Cad go díreach ar chóir go mbeadh ar eolas agat do Sheachtain na Gaeilge? Tá Seachtain na Gaeilge ag rith ón 1 – 17ú Márta i mbliana. Beidh rudaí ar siúil i ngach cúinne den Read more…
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