{"slug": "parallel-intelligence-and-cognitive-warfare", "title": "Parallel Intelligence and Cognitive Warfare", "summary": "Adversaries are creating digital twins of individuals and society to control human cognition and behavior, extending cyber conflict beyond computers into human minds. The competition between defenders and attackers now threatens democracy and human security as commercial incentives have left cognitive defenses underdeveloped. Protecting human cognition has become as critical as protecting computer systems, requiring a fundamental shift in how society understands and responds to modern threat landscapes.", "body_md": "# Parallel Intelligence and Cognitive Warfare\n\n# Contents\n\n# Disclaimer\n\nThis article contains subject matter that requires careful discussion. While the general topic is not new, this might be unsettling for some subsets of readers. It may result in feelings of disbelief in one subset, and perhaps feelings of dread in another. I kindly ask that we, including myself, keep an open mind so that we can all think clearly and truthfully about the nuances in the problem and solution spaces.\n\nTo borrow and adapt\n[phrasing](https://medium.com/@francois.chollet/what-worries-me-about-ai-ed9df072b704)\nfrom François Chollet’s post on a similar topic from 2018: This article contains\nmy own personal views. I do not speak for my employer. I am writing this as a\nmember of civil society for readers (e.g. cyber security practitioners) in their\ncapacity as members of civil society. If you reference this article, please have\nthe honesty to present these views as what they are: personal, speculative\nopinions, to be judged on their own merits.\n\n# Introduction\n\nIn my [last post](https://jackson-t.com/are-we-helping/), I discussed what it looks like in\ncommercial cyber when market incentives and long-term national security\nincentives seem to pull in opposite directions. It gives strategic adversaries\nmore breathing room to operate because we have been too busy maximizing capital.\nIn this post, I’d like to elaborate on a major blind spot that demonstrates how\nfar along they’ve come and how little we’re doing.\n\nIt is becoming understood that various actors are able to create digital twins\nof ourselves and society to ultimately control us in ways that reduce our\nprivacy *and* volition. The competition between defenders and adversaries has\nextended beyond computers into our minds. I contend that we are experiencing a\nfailure of imagination about adversaries at a scale that has proven lucrative\nfor companies while simultaneously fraying our cognition and social fabric. This\nknot poses threats to both democracy and human security. Protecting our minds\nhas become as important as protecting our computers.\n\nThere is a way out of this, but it requires sustained effort and creativity.\nSpecifically, I believe it requires: (1) a way to think clearly about the modern\nthreat landscape (where vendors have lacked commercial incentive 1), (2) the\nmotivation to correlate our daily actions to the bigger picture, and (3) the\ncourage to make decisions that help improve collective well-being with the\nagency each of us already has. With more awareness and collaboration, I’m\ncautiously optimistic things will improve.\n\nIn this essay, I will discuss both the problem space and the solution space as I see them. Here’s the article structure so you’ll know what you’re getting into:\n\n-\nIn the problem space, I’ll introduce the PRC version of “parallel intelligence,” and how methodologies like that can advance what is known as “cognitive warfare” (at a technical level). Throughout, I’ll emphasize the threat that cognitive warfare poses to democracy and human flourishing.\n\n-\nIn discussing the solution space, I’ll start with the principles and mindset shift required to address the threat. I’ll expand from there with the pillars that most efforts could fall into. This should help scaffold a mental model for response and stimulate ideas into action.\n\nIf this sounds like your cup of tea, then grab it and start sipping. It’s going\nto be a dense read. While I hope it will be enlightening, it will be an *active\nreading* exercise where I’d suggest taking breaks between sections or paragraphs\nto pause and reflect on what I’m trying to convey. Feel free to print it out or\nload it into your e-reader. If you’re feeling nerdy, check out the footnotes for\nmore nuance and speculative views.\n\nAs for the length, I wanted to weave most of my current thoughts together into\none essay for those that are interested in thinking deeply and laterally about\nthe subject matter. While the nature of AI summaries *will* obscure exactly what\nI’m trying to convey, if you need to take that route, then I’d suggest using\nGoogle’s [NotebookLM](https://notebooklm.google.com/) and generate a “deep dive”\npodcast with the link to this article. 2 In the future, I might spotlight topics\nfrom this essay with smaller, more consumable, posts.\n\nI circulated drafts of this essay among several peers for their feedback before publication. Many of them contributed to it with insightful discussion and reading materials. Several aspects of the discussions made me pause and forced me to refine my thinking. I am deeply grateful for their support.\n\n# Problem Space\n\nI’ll begin with describing the problem space. Not the one that yields solutions\nfor defenders, but the one that yields solutions for authoritarian adversaries.\nUnderstanding it comes with a learning curve that we‘ll have to build up to.\nI’ve tried my best to minimize its steepness at the loss of some nuance. 3 Once\nyou see adversary activity through this lens, it can be difficult to unsee.\n\nTo a particular “demographic” that might be reading this: You have probably\nnoticed the term *cognitive warfare*. Perhaps you may not yet have the\nvocabulary to articulate what it is, but you can already feel inklings of it. If\nwhat I’m about to describe clicks in a horrifyingly intuitive way, some\nside-effects include: uncontrollable critical thinking, spontaneous or reflexive\ncorrelations on the topics of perception and persuasion, and existential dread\nabout hyperobjects which does not go away. 4 (Also, feel free to\n\n[reach out](https://www.linkedin.com/in/jacksontvr/)to me as a fellow member of civil society. It helps to talk about it.)\n\n## Cybernetics 101 and Parallel Intelligence\n\nConsider the humble thermostat as a cybernetic system. It has *sensors* which\nmeasure the current temperature, *actuators* which enable heating or cooling,\nand a *controller* that processes sensor data to make decisions on activating\nheating or cooling based on a user-defined goal. If sensors are the eyes, and\nactuators are the hands, then controllers are the brains of the operation.\n\nWhen we apply this mental model to modulating computer security, we can get AV/EDR software. Their sensors include a wide array of real-time OS telemetry and inferences of that data. Their actuators include the ability to cloud-up normalized telemetry and prevent code execution. And their controllers are the relevant logic that connects sensors to desired outcomes with actuators based on administrator policies. A “computer security thermostat,” if you will.\n\nWhat if consumer behaviour could be modulated in this way? 5 In the social\nmedia context, sensors could collect a variety of human telemetry (messages,\ninteractions, geolocation, purchases, biometrics, etc.) and make levels of\ninferences from that data. Actuators can come in the form of feeds and\nnotifications. Controllers can construct real-time quantitative and qualitative\nprofiles of users with sensor data. These profiles can then be used to make\nsubtle but optimal decisions on ads, as well as the sequencing of feeds and\nnotifications. When compared to platform owners, end-users are severely limited\nin their ability to configure the desired outcomes in controllers. A “revenue\nthermostat” is a first-order way to think about it.\n\nThese examples start to demonstrate the applicability of cybernetics in a\nvariety of fields. In what many might call the “age of agentic AI,” modern\napproaches to modelling and simulation as well as the Chinese form of\nintelligence called [Parallel\nIntelligence](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/7589480) (PI or\nPARINT) could be seen as advanced versions of traditional cybernetic systems.\n\nProposed by polymath [Fei-Yue Wang](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fei-Yue_Wang)\nin 2004 (and envisioned as early as 1994) 6, the core of Parallel Intelligence is the ACP\nmethodology: artificial societies (A), computational experiments (C), and parallel\nexecution (P).\n\n[source](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10462-024-10861-9#Fig3))\n\nIt looks like a complex topic but one way to start thinking about this is to first imagine the actual society we live in. In this physical world, there is a wide array of sensors that can track what people do online and offline with increasing levels of fidelity. This includes data from interactions with phones and social media.\n\nNow imagine computerized versions of that world where data from those sensors\nflow into them in real-time to make increasingly accurate models of us and our\nenvironment. These are “artificial societies.” For initial illustrative\npurposes, it might help to imagine higher-resolution versions of simulator games\nlike *The Sims* or *Cities: Skylines*. These worlds could be configured to have\ndesired objectives (like maximizing party loyalty or revenue). Simulated\nscenarios or “computational experiments” can run against them to make\ndescriptions, predictions, and prescriptions relevant to those objectives.\n\nIndeed, these simulations can yield a variety of interventions to introduce into the real world, and this is done in the effort to make the actual society converge to the desired artificial society. This is what “parallel execution” is about: artificial societies are continually enriched with sensor data, and actual societies are continually managed toward a desired outcome with quantifiably optimal interventions. A “social control thermostat”, if you will.\n\nAlthough Parallel Intelligence spans a variety of benign applications (transit,\nagriculture, healthcare, etc.), competitive implementations present risks\nto societal well-being within democratic societies and overall human\nflourishing. According to DEMOS (UK think tank), democracies are suffering an\n[epistemic\ncollapse](https://demos.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/VDA_Epistemic-Security_paper_October.pdf),\nwhich is “a deeper breakdown in the basic conditions that allow societies to\nestablish truth, debate what matters, and hold power to account.” As I’ll\ndescribe in more detail, the ACP methodology could be used to automate these\nbreakdowns.\n\nIn my current thinking, it seems prudent to recognize that with technological approaches similar to ACP, there are a variety of actors who are interested in developing and using them with different intents in mind:\n\n__Commercial Entities__. Technology like this can be useful for any sales and\nmarketing department selling running shoes, private jets, pop concerts, and\nmore. It can be equally useful for frontier labs supporting the development of\npublic-facing services like [self-driving\ncars](https://waymo.com/blog/2026/02/the-waymo-world-model-a-new-frontier-for-autonomous-driving-simulation/).\nWithin this ecosystem, players can range from [marketing\nstart-ups](https://societies.io/) to hyperscalers. In a way, I currently think\nthis is where the technology underpinning Shoshana Zuboff’s concept of\n[ surveillance\ncapitalism](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surveillance_capitalism) is going. In\nthis concept, personal data is collected and commodified to serve the\nprofit-making incentive.\n\n[Artificial Societies](https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/artificial-societies)builds “networks of AI personas that simulate stakeholder opinions.”\n\n__Political Consultancies__. The most obvious public example of this was the\n[controversial](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook%E2%80%93Cambridge_Analytica_data_scandal)\nwork of [Cambridge\nAnalytica](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambridge_Analytica). In the 2017 talk\n[ From Mad Men to Math Men](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6bG5ps5KdDo), chief\nexecutive Alexander Nix described how they collected vast amounts of data to\nbuild detailed psychological profiles of voters, using them for highly\npersuasive messaging. The end of this talk surfaced the tension between what\nfree and fair elections\n\n*mean*at political versus psychological levels of analysis. In his book\n\n*, former employee Christopher Wylie expressed his opinion that “America is now living in the aftermath of the first scaled deployment of a psychological weapon of mass destruction.” He further wrote:*\n\n[Mindf*ck](https://www.amazon.com/Mindf-Inside-Cambridge-Analyticas-Break/dp/1788164997)Like so many people in technology, I stupidly fell for the hubristic allure of Facebook’s call to “move fast and break things.” I’ve never regretted something so much. I moved fast, I built things of immense power, and I never fully appreciated what I was breaking until it was too late.\n\n__Authoritarian Governments__. According to researchers like Jason\nBruzdzinski (former MITRE Principal) and Anthony Vinci (former NGA CTO),\nParallel Intelligence increasingly plays a role within China’s global system of\nsocial control. In [The Fourth Intelligence\nRevolution](https://www.amazon.com/dp/1250370906), Dr. Vinci wrote:\n\nArtificial intelligence can drive intelligence even farther into much more sophisticated forms of analysis. The technology can be used for modeling and simulation by creating AI agents that can model the thought processes and actions of adversaries. Scenarios can be planned and played out to see what will happen. Indeed, some have argued that China is already headed in this direction through the creation of parallel intelligence. In this approach, the Chinese surveillance system is used to collect as much open-source data as possible and then to model out the U.S. military, economy, and more to eventually develop countermeasures to our systems.\n\nBruzdzinski’s [open-source\nanalysis](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SCtZoCxPqzQ) suggests that adversaries\nlike China and Russia are working on what he calls a *mega model*. This can be\n“at the level of large and complex cities like Manhattan, Houston, Los Angeles,\netc.,” and can be developed “with a shocking degree of fidelity, in some cases\ndown to the square metre of resolution.” He also suggests that modelling of\npeople and organizations in societies is already happening. He continues to say,\n“I think that it’s really important to get after this and to get after it very\nquickly, because the failure to do so could have very profound implications.”\n\n[source](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10462-024-10861-9#Fig21))\n\nOne of the implications to me is that even if the CCP hasn’t fully realized the\nvision of PARINT, they already have the whole-of-society capacity to improve\ntheir networks of sensors, actuators, and controllers beyond what any other\nWestern actor can achieve alone. 7 Their advantage in these areas increases\nfidelity of their models and simulations, and therefore the power of their panopticonic\nsocial control system (which is becoming global).\n\nThis would give them the means to influence Western commercial and political entities in ways that\n\n[8](#fn:8)*efficiently*achieve the goals of those entities (i.e. more capital, more engaged voters), while ensuring that the second-order effects ultimately serve CCP interests.\n\nTo ground this all with an example, we should consider that China is working\nrelentlessly to shape Western public opinion to oppose support for Taiwan.\nIncreasingly comprehensive [digital\ntwin](https://i.blackhat.com/BH-USA-25/Presentations/US-25-Sawyer-Canham-EvilDigitalTwinToo.pdf)\nmodels of citizens 9 can be created from multi-disciplinary inferences which,\nin turn, rely on ubiquitous technical surveillance. Relevant sensors can be\nsourced from state-linked entities (Huawei, TikTok, Temu, etc.), bulk purchases\nfrom Western entities (e.g. data brokers), and data breaches. Scenarios can be\nsimulated on these models to prescribe intervention portfolios, tailored at both\nindividual- and group-levels.\n\nIndividual-level interventions can include the creation of digital twin personas\nof U.S. Congress members to maintain a presence wherever they browse social\nmedia and create engaging content intended to diminish their support for Taiwan.\nAs discovered by researchers Brett Goldstein and Brett Benson, it turns out that\na Chinese company called GoLaxy was already\n[attempting](https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/05/opinion/china-ai-propaganda.html)\nto do this:\n\nWhat sets GoLaxy apart is its integration of generative A.I. with enormous troves of personal data. Its systems continually mine social media platforms to build dynamic psychological profiles. Its content is customized to a person’s values, beliefs, emotional tendencies and vulnerabilities. According to the documents, A.I. personas can then engage users in what appears to be a conversation — content that feels authentic, adapts in real-time and avoids detection. The result is a highly efficient propaganda engine that’s designed to be nearly indistinguishable from legitimate online interaction, delivered instantaneously at a scale never before achieved.\n\nGroup-level interventions can include targeted “butterfly effect” supply-chain disruptions which could raise the cost-of-living for broad segments of the population, as companies make rational business decisions to pass increased costs onto consumers. As a second-order effect, this could support narratives for domestic allocation of funding that would otherwise be used to assist Taiwan, e.g. “Why are we spending money defending Taiwan when I can’t afford groceries?”\n\nThis example starts to demonstrate how broad the sensor and actuator options can\nbe, and how they can be orchestrated through ACP-like systems. Cyber intrusion\noperations might not be necessarily required, and attribution can be difficult\nwhen the CCP can *parasitically exploit* the business practices of commercial\nentities.\n\nI think it’s important to expand on this parasite analogy, even though it might\nbe disorienting for commercial practitioners. The phenomenon of parasitical\nasymmetry is described in more detail in Chapter 4 of Anthony Vinci’s\n[book](https://www.amazon.com/dp/1250370906). The insight I had when reading\nthis was that adversaries in commercial cybersecurity are conventionally framed\nas classes of storms or animals, but none of those reflect the behavioural\ncharacteristics of parasites. I think this conventional framing has, along with\n[other incentives](https://jackson-t.com/are-we-helping/), conditioned us to\nfocus more on the threats which are *immediately* antagonistic to business.\n\nAs we begin to understand that competition has extended beyond computers into\nminds, the adversary’s most durable strategy is not to breach computers but to\nmake our rational commercial behaviour ultimately serve their interests.\nIt used to be about adversaries charging into the fortress through the\nperimeter. Now it’s about parasites making you unwittingly serve adversary\ninterests from within. Once you see it this way, the action isn’t necessarily in\ncyber telemetry. It’s in the business decisions and the\n[externalities](https://www.britannica.com/money/externality-economics) they\nproduce.[10](#fn:10)\n\n__Artificial Intelligence__. My speculation is that the arms race of\nACP-like AI systems between the actors above will exacerbate human security\nissues as an unintended consequence (i.e. the loss of privacy, volition 11,\ncompetence, trust, patience, integrity, struggle, inefficiency, and\nserendipity).\n\nAssuming this is not terminal, it will probably take at least a generation to recover from. Novels like\n\n[12](#fn:12)\n\n*Daemon*and, perhaps eventually,\n\n[13](#fn:13)[describe the societal impacts of this possible future. Fei-Yue Wang’s collaborators openly](https://www.amazon.com/Optimal-J-M-Berger/dp/B08GLMNKJ1)\n\n*Optimal*[acknowledge](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10778728)that “many scenarios that were once thought to only appear in science fiction films such as ‘Source Code’, ‘Westworld’, and ‘The Matrix’ have now become a reality.”\n\nI should reiterate that Parallel Intelligence and the ACP methodology does have\na variety of benign uses. When implemented collaboratively and humanely\n(instead of competitively and efficiently), I think it can help strengthen\ndemocratic societies instead of eroding them. But the ongoing arms race of\ncompetitive implementations has concerning impacts on society that can emerge\nfrom effects on cognition. Serious solutions require wisdom (i.e. higher-order\ncognition), which has been under deliberate attack. So we need to understand how\nthis arms race of ACP-like systems contributes to something called “[cognitive\nwarfare](https://www.act.nato.int/activities/cognitive-warfare/)”, which is not\nwell known to most people. The next section aims to form a baseline\nunderstanding.\n\n## Cognitive Warfare\n\nCognition is being [considered](https://hal.science/hal-03635898/document) by\nNATO as the sixth domain of warfare. The basic meaning is in the name: it treats\ncognition as another domain of warfare. If the cyber domain targets computers,\nthen the cognitive domain targets minds. Yes, that includes biological brains.\nAnthony Vinci dedicated a chapter to cognitive warfare in his book, and there\nare a few choice quotes worth referencing as a way to introduce this topic:\n\n-\n*It is a means to control how people think and what they think in such a way as to influence them to do what you want, whether that’s a private surrendering on the battlefield … or an entire population being for or against a war.* -\n*In other words, cognitive warfare is about actively changing or even controlling how we think and act, i.e., mind control, and this is not science fiction, it is very real.*[14](#fn:14) -\n*Where LSD failed, silicon has succeeded.*\n\n[this](https://www.sto.nato.int/wp-content/uploads/chief-scientist-report-cognitive-warfare-4.pdf)NATO report.\n\nWhile *information operations* (IO) have traditionally focused on the data that\nshapes “what” individuals and groups think, *cognitive warfare* (CW) is an evolution\nthat also shapes “how” individuals and groups think and the meaning derived from\ndata.[15](#fn:15)\n\nThis includes effects like degrading: attention spans, absorption of nuanced\ninformation, and rationality. For any number of topics, it also includes making\npeople think reflexively instead of reflectively, exploitatively instead of\nexploratively, and decreasing *bit-depth* and *second-order thinking*. 16 We can\nstart to think of these areas as having controls that can be dialed up or down.\nBy the way, have you noticed changes in these areas over the past decade or\nmore?\n\nMetaphorically: is decision making bit-depth increasing in machines, while decreasing in humans? This question was inspired by David Krakauer's (Santa Fe Institute president) [mental model](/cognitive-artifacts-complementary-competitive/) of complementary and competitive artifacts, as well as thinking about how human- and machine-learned decision making processes could be understood through the lens of [cyclomatic complexity](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclomatic_complexity).\n\nIn this style of warfare, targets scale up to populations across generations.\nYes, population-scale includes you, your family, friends, and neighbours.\nMethods could intentionally trigger fractal-like effects rippling up from the\nneuronal-level to the organizational-level. 17 I think with more\nintrospection, it can sometimes feel like a spell has been cast over all of us.\nPerhaps we are under a “persistent state of cognitive manipulation” as Dr. Jake\nBebber\n\n[describes](https://www.hudson.org/defense-strategy/cognitive-competition-conflict-war-ontological-approach-robert-jake-bebber)it (as a scholar for the Hudson Institute):\n\nThus far, policymakers in the United States have been slow to diagnose and react to cognitive warfare not only because of its novelty but also perhaps because the American public has remained under a persistent state of cognitive manipulation, which has debilitated the people.\n\nThis is probably not what most people want to hear, but these effects will\nlikely take decades to recover from. 18 Fact check interventions with nuanced\nwhite papers just aren’t that useful for anyone whose brain has been conditioned\nto rely on AI summaries or spend hours at a time flipping through short-form\nvideos.\n\nTo me, it is actually the *orchestration* of interventions that requires nuance,\nnot necessarily in the content of what’s presented. There is still a time and\nplace for longer-form content, but knowing when and where to present them\nmatters just as much. To borrow a [sports\nanalogy](https://web.archive.org/web/20250211181740/https://www.boozallen.com/insights/cyber/tech/measurement-and-visualization-of-the-cognitive-domain.html)\nfrom Dr. Sean Guillory: “think of how golfers assess the lay of the land on the\ngolf course and choose their clubs based on where they want to move the ball.”\nIn order to assess the lay of the land, we first need to sharpen our\nunderstanding of the systems that could shape the terrain and automate these\neffects.\n\nLet’s sketch out what the automated orchestration of these effects could look\nlike. 19 Central to any domain of warfare is a competition on cybernetic\ncapabilities for sensors, controllers, and actuators.\n\nI see ACP as a cybernetic vehicle for enabling any domain of warfare, and it has influenced the way I think about how cognitive warfare can be operationalized. We’re about to get into the weeds here, but reading through it will help build an appreciation for what’s at stake. This is an area of ongoing research for me, and I try to oscillate between the forest and trees. Consider the following as speculative, directional, and open to change:\n\n[20](#fn:20)__Data Collection__. This starts with the comprehensive collection of various\nstreams 21 of personally identifiable information and behaviour (PII and PIB)\nassociated with citizens. As mentioned earlier for the PRC, the sourcing of this\ninformation can go beyond\n\n[breach records](https://databreach.com/breach)into data collected from state-linked entities (Huawei, TikTok, Temu, etc.) as well as purchases from Western entities. Various\n\n[privacy policies](https://privacy-decoded.com/)provide a starting point for understanding the data types that can provide value (e.g. biometrics, messages, geolocation, video, audio, purchases). Maintaining a hierarchical taxonomy of data types would be useful for organizing both offensive and defensive efforts. This can help catalog which organizations are relevant per data type, and help identify collection gaps.\n\n__Quantitative and Qualitative Inferences__. This is the process of\ndeveloping\n[frame-dependent](https://softmax.com/blog/the-frame-dependent-mind) 22\nsensors that infer knowledge from raw personal data or other inferences. For\nexample, participating in a video call may yield a variety of inferences\nincluding but not limited to: meeting attendance frequency, interruption\nfrequency, talk-time share,\n\n[LIWC](https://camille1.github.io/pyliwc/)scores,\n\n[Flesch-Kincaid](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flesch%E2%80%93Kincaid_readability_tests)grade level, other LLM-based natural language processing methods\n\n,\n\n[23](#fn:23)[heart rate estimation](https://prouast.github.io/heartbeat-js/), and\n\n[fMRI brain activity](https://ai.meta.com/blog/tribe-v2-brain-predictive-foundation-model/). These inferences can be used together to create digital twin representations of targets.\n\nI currently see representations as collections of quantitative and qualitative\nknowledge. Quantitative knowledge can come in the form of scalars and vectors\nthat can combine to form high-dimensional, per-individual, feature vectors.\nQualitative knowledge can come in the form of LLM-generated, per-individual,\npersonas 24 where some can be frame-specific and others can serve as a\nconsolidation of frames. Both of these should be computable as a function of\ntargets and time windows (which can be sliding). These representations can be\nused to surface vulnerabilities or\n\n[biases](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cognitive_bias_codex_en.svg)that can be exploitable in a context-dependent way.\n\n__Common Operating Picture__. There should be ways to visualize the cognitive\nstate of individuals and groups, in a manner that provides utility beyond\nconventional geographical representations. It makes sense to me to have\nvisualizations that span across physiological, psychological, and sociological\nlevels. A small set of examples include: weighted social network graphs that\ninclude parasocial relationships 25, persona projections\n\n, and belief landscapes\n\n[26](#fn:26). See the footnotes for more details.\n\n[27](#fn:27)[synthetic persona](https://huggingface.co/datasets/nvidia/Nemotron-Personas-USA)projection created with\n\n[DataMapPlot](https://github.com/TutteInstitute/datamapplot)and\n\n[Toponomy](https://github.com/TutteInstitute/toponymy).\n\nEntropy could be interesting as a metric from information theory that cuts\nacross [integrative levels](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrative_level),\nand as a quantitative measure for cognitive security. Brian Russell and John\nBicknell have\n[described](https://information-professionals.org/the-coin-of-the-realm-understanding-and-predicting-relative-system-behavior/)\nunderstanding relative system behaviour as “the coin of the realm”, where\nentropy serves as a measurement. I’m not yet sure how the measurement would be\nimplemented at each level.\n\n__Control Centre__. I’m imagining this to be the interface that commanders or\nsystem operators use to both define and manifest desired outcomes (i.e.\nself-fulfilling prophecies in the context of [Merton’s Laws](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/7589480)). If warfare could be\nunderstood abstractly as zero-sum competitions between groups for welfare\nmaximization, then I have to imagine that this interface is where the\nflourishing and languishing of targets can be parameterized.\n\nI currently use the word “campaign” to describe the specifications of desired\noutcomes. Every campaign could be scoped toward particular individuals or\ngroups, with the option to impose a deadline. From a quantitative standpoint,\ndesired outcomes can be defined in terms of changes to feature values (e.g.\ndecreasing daily hours spent sleeping, increasing daily hours spent in\nparasocial relationships). Desired outcomes could also be qualitatively defined\nas imperative language\n([prompts](https://huggingface.co/datasets/psyonp/SocialHarmBench/viewer?row=74))\nwhich can be used to continually revise personas and feature values for\nconvergence.\n\nSimulations could be recommended and scheduled as a way to mine interventions for parallel execution. There should be controls on whether mined interventions should be introduced into the real world automatically (human-on-the-loop), or if manual human validation is required (human-in-the-loop). This would depend on the stakes and scale of those decisions. Furthermore, campaigns should be ranked to ensure that the proposed interventions of lower-priority campaigns do not impede the success of higher-priority campaigns.\n\n__Modeling and Simulation__. While LLM-based digital twins of individuals\nserve as a starting point to simulate how targets might respond to various\nsituations, simulations in ACP can go far beyond that. As suggested in an\n[earlier\nfigure](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10462-024-10861-9#Fig21),\nmodeling a city would involve not just the individuals, but perhaps also\nbusiness processes across enterprises, transportation systems, and so on.\nSimulating these additional systems can increase realism by constraining what’s\npossible and likely. They can also increase realism by modeling the second-order\neffects that occur between systems (e.g. how the outcomes of simulated supply\nchain disruptions can impact opinion polling on digital twins). At a more\ntechnical level, I find it useful to study frameworks (e.g.\n[Concordia](https://github.com/google-deepmind/concordia) and\n[AgentSociety](https://github.com/tsinghua-fib-lab/agentsociety)) and simulation\ngames (e.g. [Universe\nSandbox](https://universesandbox.com/blog/2014/10/climate/) and\n[Democracy](https://www.positech.co.uk/democracy4/)) through the lens of\nACP-based PI.\n\n__Control Vectors__. Although the social media methods for disinformation\ncampaigns are known to be prominent in this domain, I think they only start to\nscratch the surface of what’s possible. Cognitive warfare interventions would be\nmost effective when they span across and combine all instruments of both\nnational power and parasitic asymmetries. In the ACP context, each campaign can\nbenefit from various interventions being used together. Consider the following\nexamples across media, economics, and physiological health:\n\n- Bots on social media, gaming, and betting platforms can amplify or generate\nmedia to serve a variety of campaigns. In media, both\n[content and form](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Form_and_content)can produce effects. Content is the subject matter and meaning that creators direct our attention toward. Form is the aesthetic and design techniques which are often invisible when we’re not looking for them.\n\nWhen it comes to content, social media bots can amplify real posts about local business closures, local crime, social inequalities, and empty store shelves. While these raise awareness about true grievances that need to be addressed, it can also serve the interests of adversaries as a way to distract target populations. Bots today can also fabricate a[firehose](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firehose_of_falsehood)of mostly false, but internally consistent accounts of current events. This would serve efforts to make epistemic security mentally exhausting. When combined with algorithmic news feeds,[research suggests](https://www.nature.com/articles/s42256-023-00731-4)this traps people in “information cocoons” with homogenous viewpoints, further aggravating social polarization. Together, these ultimately erode the conditions for functioning democracies.\n\nWhen it comes to form, consider the design techniques (or “[TTPs](https://csrc.nist.gov/glossary/term/tactics_techniques_and_procedures)”, if you will) that are often used competitively to present content for algorithmic feeds. These include the short provocative sentence on a LinkedIn post, as well as the frenetic and visually fragmented TikTok with word-popping subtitles. Now consider how the presentation of content changes as its length decreases. A calming 30-minute episode ofversus a 15-second supercut of the same recipe. A gentle incandescent turn signal versus its dazzling LED counterpart in some modern cars.*Martha Cooks*[Research suggests](https://psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/2026-89350-001.html)that increased consumption of short-form videos is associated with poorer cognition. Even when the*content*is actively determined to be truthful, passive processing of its*form*risks degrading cognition. Adversaries like the CCP don’t need to generate these “payloads” on their own. They just need to induce capitalistic competition among Western media platforms and content creators (influencers, marketing departments, etc.).[28](#fn:28)\n\n- Various actuators may produce economic effects that exacerbate\n[income inequality](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gini_coefficient)while increasing GDP. One example is exploiting dynamic pricing algorithms to induce artificial demand and raise prices (flights, ride-sharing, concerts, freight and logistics, etc.).Another is inducing friction in supply chains (i.e.[29](#fn:29)[weaponized interdependence](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaponized_interdependence)) in ways that raise prices for consumers as companies make rational decisions to protect their profit margins. These economic effects can have second-order cognitive effects. When it comes to the PRC deterring public support for Taiwan, the effects might discourage support from the affluent top 10% so they can protect their lifestyles and income streams. Meanwhile, the bottom 90% might become increasingly focused on their psychological and financial survival in a way that reduces the cognitive bandwidth to think about seemingly abstract topics like foreign policy.\n\n- Another set of actuators could indirectly produce lower-level physiological\neffects that can ripple upward to degrade critical thinking and induce\nsocietal incohesion. To think clearly about these, we need to regard cognitive\nprocesses as inseparable from their physical substrates.\nOne example for highly targeted influence could involve the ability to generate noise from personal devices for precisely-timed sleep disruptions (e.g. spam calls or tampered notification settings). The production and dissemination of content that discourages healthy eating and exercise could be relevant for less targeted influence, but it’s not clear to me how much deliberate effort a traditional adversary needs to invest toward[30](#fn:30)*this*end of the causal chain when it can happen organically through commercial incentives. Consider the incentives for[ultra-processed foods](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultra-processed_food)and binge-watching shows at night.[31](#fn:31)\n\nFrom a cyber security perspective, it’s remarkable that these actuators don’t\nalways require “initial access” into networks or sweeping administrative\nprivileges (e.g. [Domain\nAdmin](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/identity/ad-ds/plan/security-best-practices/appendix-b--privileged-accounts-and-groups-in-active-directory#domain-admins)).\nResearchers Paul Thompson and Sean Guillory provide a useful\n[perspective](https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/artificial-intelligence/articles/10.3389/frai.2025.1616447/full):\n\nUnlike traditional cyberattacks at the time focusing on breaking systems, cognitive attacks work by distorting how humans perceive reality and make decisions. Rather than taking down a server or corrupting data, a cognitive attack shifts the interpretation of information. The attacker does not need to control the system, they only need to control the conclusions the system’s users draw from it.\n\n__Academic Researchers__. Underpinning innovation in all of the areas above\nwould be researchers providing perspectives from a variety of disciplines. By\napplying frames within them, they could aid the development of sensors,\ncontrollers, and actuators. 32 Some examples include helping build sensor\nautomation for quantitative and qualitative inferences, and determining\nframe-specific parameters for actuators. The diversity of perspectives would\nmake the overall cybernetic system stronger in a way that is consistent with\nAshby’s\n\n[Law of Requisite Variety](https://www.edge.org/response-detail/27150). In other words, a larger set of perspectives yields a larger (and more amorphous) action space for influencing target populations.\n\nWhile I’m certain that what I’ve started to sketch out requires further\nrefining, the potential of such a system becomes apparent. Let me phrase it this\nway: Is a “*value* system” a set of held beliefs? Could a “value *system*” also\nbe understood as a system of capabilities for entrenching those beliefs into\nreality?\n\nIt fascinates me to think about how raw personal data can be collected so that they could be used to run simulations that are distilled into optimized courses of action in the real world. I’ve come to realize that what starts with collection ultimately ends with control.\n\nIt’s commonly understood that in the 20th century, propaganda took\nshape in the form of broadcasted communications (pamphlets, rallies, etc.). In\nthe 21st century, I believe propaganda will increasingly be\nunderstood as the systemic orchestration of personalized, ambient\nrealities. 33 As Fei-Yue Wang and his collaborators\n\n[suggest](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10778728), you can think metaphorically about how\n\n*The Matrix*shapes ambient reality and creates a “\n\n[prison for your mind](https://youtu.be/6rrPP-QOF3k?t=112).” I believe this poses various threats to democracy and individual\n\n[human flourishing](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flourishing). I also think that the ACP framework offers a methodology for orchestrating this.\n\nIn the pursuit of thinking clearly about difficult topics, this is probably a\ngood time to start considering two uncomfortable views: First, technological\ninnovation in social control and marketing have trended in similar directions.\nSecond, marketing departments across many companies seem to unwittingly advance\nthe cognitive warfare interests of authoritarian adversaries, as a *second-order\neffect* of the profit making incentive.\n\nThis is a tough economic knot to untangle, but the first step is to recognize\nthat it’s there. Our value system makes it harder to recognize that what many\npeople see as a feature in our society (i.e. market economics), is probably seen\nas an exploitable bug by authoritarian governments. In turn, they might view the\nclosed and controlled nature of their economies as a necessary defense to the\nvulnerabilities they’re able to (easily) exploit in ours.[34](#fn:34)\n\nOverall, we seem to be losing a battle that the average citizen doesn’t realize\nwe’re in. We haven’t quite had a *cognitive* “9/11 moment” in a way that will\ntangibly and emotionally resonate with *most* citizens. It seems logical that\nauthoritarian adversaries want to avoid such a flashpoint because it would\nmobilize more citizens to fight them. As researcher Elizabeth Anderson\n[said](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKqAaDJJUuo) about cognitive warfare:\n“The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting. Our adversaries\nunderstand this, and they’re betting that we won’t recognize the war until after\nwe’ve already lost.”\n\nIf you’ve gotten this far, I like to think it’s because you’re starting to make the choice to wake up and see the writing on the wall more clearly. Democracy isn’t just a state of territory, it’s a state of mind. Maybe like me, you probably don’t like where the status quo is going and are mulling over what it takes to do something about it. The next section covers how I’m currently thinking about the solution space, and I encourage you to keep reading.\n\nNow here is another note to that particular “demographic” I mentioned near the\ntop of this post: It is *very* easy to feel disillusioned by what‘s happening\nand turn inward, because what‘s the most one person can do anyway? I get it,\nI’ve been there and was stuck there for years. Earlier, I wrote about the\nnegative side-effects that come with understanding the breadth and depth of the\nproblem space. Let me talk about the positive side-effects that come with\nengaging in the solution space. They include: (1) improved meta-cognition as a\nway to defend your own mind, (2) a “centering effect” that comes from feeling\ncompassion for those that you disagree with, and (3) a sense of agency, purpose,\nand even creativity in tumultuous times. Lastly, I want you to know that hope can be\nstrategic. Even when you don’t feel it, hope can still be a useful tool.\n\n# Solution Space\n\n## Principles and Mindset Shift\n\nBy engaging with the problem space, we widened our understanding of the\ntechnological apparatus *and* the variety of actors incentivized to use it in\nways that can undermine cognitive security and democracy. We also understood\nperspectives from national security practitioners warning us about the threat.\n\nOver the past couple of years, I’ve had many conversations with diverse\nperspectives on what should be done about this. For many cyber security\npractitioners who “get it,” a common feeling is that this is anxiety inducing. It\nis anxiety inducing to think about how far behind we are in cognitive security,\nhow frivolous many of *today’s* cybersecurity practices seem in light of this\ngenerational challenge, and how many companies unwittingly exacerbate the\nproblem through their action and inaction. This also piles onto other equally\npressing concerns like climate change, kinetic wars, and the uncertainties of\nAI. And all of this is happening while we are moving through our day, keeping\nour heads down, trying to survive the next round of workforce reductions.\n\nIt has become so easy to think that making a difference is beyond our control.\n“Maybe it’s above our pay grade, or maybe the real solutions aren’t profitable,\nso maybe it’s only a problem for government or civil society (non-profits) to\nsolve.” This line of thinking will just make us feel even more anxious as time\npasses and inaction abounds. What we need to understand is that cognitive\nwarfare is *intended* to cause paralysis within ourselves and between our\nsectors. Adversaries are counting on us to *not* step up before it’s too late.\n\nWhat we’re actually dealing with is called a [collective action\nproblem](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_action_problem). It’s where we\nwould all be better off working together but fail to do so because our\nindividual incentives discourage joint action toward the common good. This\nsounds to me like something adversaries would want to induce as part of a divide\nand conquer strategy.[35](#fn:35)\n\nWhen it comes to the relations between government, industry, and civil society, I think a more productive framing is to see ourselves as members of a basketball team, with our positions representing these sectors. In this team, we should be working together to score wins for (little-d) democratic principles. This includes convictions for objective truth, consensus reality, compassion for all, freedom of speech and thought (cognitive liberty), and the rule of law. These are part of the basic conditions that allow democracies to function effectively. We are competing against players who are promoting autocratic principles. They are getting stronger and are currently winning.\n\nSeeing things this way helps us understand that it’s going to take a\nwhole-of-society team effort, and that we need to get to know our teammates and\ntheir positions better. 36 Specifically we should be thinking about: What can\ngovernments do? What can companies do? What can civil society do? And how can we\nform bridges for all three to work together?\n\nAs players on “Team Democracy,” we need to think of ourselves as having trusted\ninfluence with each other (often in fluid situations). This helps us work toward\nshared outcomes that benefit us all. Sometimes it’s a social process when you\nget stuck and realize you need to pass the ball. This helps build relationships.\nSometimes it’s a mental process as you alternate positions from playing a\ncommercial role to playing a civil society role, reflecting on how your actions\nwithin both roles can serve the greater good. This helps build empathy. When you\nstart to see things this way and find like-minded people to work with, it will\nopen a door to a wider “action space” that may have been difficult to see before\n(despite hiding in plain sight).[37](#fn:37)\n\nOf course, this all sounds like extra effort. But the cure to anxiety is action. You can use the agency you already have to make small and creative choices driven by the principled conviction of how democratic societies are normally supposed to function. Everyone has something small that they’re good at, that they can contribute to (even when it’s not obvious). But when more people do this, it gets easier and adds up like compounding interest.\n\nAnd along the way, others and even your own inner monologue will try to convince you to keep your head down and stay in your lane. While there’s the action space within your typical responsibilities, there’s also the action space that promotes democratic principles. It turns out that these are not mutually exclusive, and the middle part of the Venn diagram is larger than you think. Figuring out exactly what that “middle part” is within each of our roles is the fun and creative part about converting anxiety into little meaningful actions.\n\nMy crude depiction of the Venn diagram analogy.\n\nAs adversaries continue to induce the cognitive version of “death by a thousand cuts,” coarsening the bit-depth of our decision making, we have to realize that no action on its own will be decisive. Instead, we must recognize the need to start with what I would call “flourishing by a thousand small wins.”\n\nTo some, this might sound like a tall order, but we seem to be\n[admittedly](https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/apr/3/pentagon-readying-cognitive-war/)\nlate to the cognitive security game and should start somewhere. To others,\nfocusing on “small wins” might not sound like enough. I am all for ambitious\nprojects, and we need motivated leaders who are willing to dedicate their\ncareers to them. That said, they will only be effective with a culture of\ncollective effort.\n\nIn any case, I’ve been thinking about how to categorize potential efforts. Currently, it seems to me that any meaningful action will likely fall into at least one of the following three pillars: (1) degrade adversary capabilities, (2) build cognitive resilience, and (3) foster communities of interest. In other words: impose cost on adversaries, become wiser, and spread the word.\n\nThese are intentionally broad and I’ll define them in the proceeding sections.\nWithin each, I’ll discuss what I think meaningful actions could look like from\nmy perspective (as a starting point for a more [constructive\ndebate](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njYciFC7mR8)).\n\nIt’s likely that a subset of tactically-minded readers might be expecting specific and decisive recommendations on what to do. I’m not sure if that’s the right question to ask at this early stage, and I would be skeptical of quick and comprehensive-sounding commercial solutions because of what the profit motive currently incentivizes. Instead, I can share my opinion on what the outcomes should look like as well as some guidance on what it takes to get there. This is a journey, and it’s up to all of us to act within what we can control and expand the middle part of the Venn diagram in our own, unique, ways.\n\n### Pillar 1: Degrade Adversary Capabilities\n\nWe now have a baseline, *cybernetic*, understanding of what capabilities for\nsocial control looks like. When you start to see things this way, degrading\nadversary capabilities ultimately involves:\n\n- Limiting and distorting the flow of personal data ingested into\n*sensors*. - Blunting hardware and software advances in\n*controllers*. - Hardening various processes that could be exploited for their\n*actuators*.\n\nMeaningful action here will be diverse and cut across all sectors of society, with examples ranging from export regulations on AI chips, to everyday citizens installing ad blockers, to having commercial cyber security departments and vendors realize they’re on one of the frontlines and adapt to this challenge. Each action will appear imperfect when evaluated on its own, but together they will help push the needle.\n\nAdapting to cognitive threats is what cyber security organizations are supposed\nto be doing, in the way physical security organizations continue to adapt to\ncyber threats. I contend that [market\nincentives](https://jackson-t.com/are-we-helping/) and the parasitic\nexploitation of them have made adaptation difficult. To stimulate progress, I’ll\nspotlight one idea 38 that I think is fundamental and worth building on\nacross sectors: proactive threat intelligence for maligned cybernetic systems.\n\nWe’ve become so lucratively good at building systems that identify and react\nto adversary IOCs and TTPs, but not so much on *systems* that anticipate their\noperational objectives and helps orchestrate layered defenses. Given that actors are\noperating downstream from the technology available to them 39, adopting a\ncybernetic perspective helps orient on threats from ACP-like systems.\n\nBehind every sensor, controller, and actuator are sets of exploited data or\nprocesses, conceptual frames, and motivations. Surfacing these relationships\nrequire skills that are ultimately better suited for different types of\nanalysts. Persisting these vetted relationships into a graph database would help\nprovide proactive direction and productivity to a variety of downstream\nconsumers. This includes but is not limited to: threat hunting, product\nsecurity, offensive security, business continuity, and procurement. For some\nmore details, read the caption of the figure below and this footnote. 40 I\nmay consider dedicating a post to this later (as I refine this concept), but\nwanted to plant a seed for now.\n\nAn ontology for the proactive and speculative mapping of cybernetic systems related to cognitive warfare. This can be used to surface targets for exploitable data and processes. The ability to query this data could help prioritize hardening systems and influence procurement decisions.\n\nIt’s well understood that actions to degrade adversary capabilities are necessary and will help. However, my main criticism with this pillar is that despite companies having some muscle memory in this area, focusing mostly on this aspect would be dangerously incomplete. It’s a bit like solving malaria by hunting mosquitoes and disrupting their breeding grounds. That’s just not enough. We also need to think about how to inoculate ourselves. We all need to become wiser.\n\n### Pillar 2: Build Cognitive Resilience\n\nWhether it’s cognitive warfare, climate change, or the risks of AI, we all need\nto *become the most mature version of ourselves* in order to solve collective\naction problems. 41 We need regular people in society to gain resilience.\n\nCyber security practitioners are used to thinking about computers as endpoints\nthat need to be protected systematically. And it’s obvious today that computer\nsecurity is *fundamentally* more than Kensington locks or the physical security\nof data centres. We now need to realize that the focus has shifted, and treat *human\nminds* as the ultimate “endpoints” that systematically need resilience and\nprotection. This means meeting the cognitive domain on its own terms and not fall\ninto the trap of treating it as an extension of cyber.\n\nSo what does resilience look like at a high level? To me, it’s about dialing\n__up__ our attention spans, our ability to think rationally, to think\nreflectively instead of reflexively, and raising the “bit-depth” of our decision\nmaking processes. As people work together toward dialing these up, it will allow\nus to reclaim declining aspects of our humanity like trust, social cohesion,\ncuriosity, creativity, serendipity, patience, competence, privacy, and volition.\n\nBoth Anthony Vinci and [Jennifer\nEwbank](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=le-mu8Om0q8) (former CIA deputy\ndirector) make generally similar arguments that the path forward is for regular\npeople to:\n\n- Understand the world through the lens of intelligence practitioners.\n[42](#fn:42) - Learn practical ways to navigate this world with critical thinking.\n\nThere can be a lot of creative and situation-specific ways to introduce both of these. It ultimately comes down to choices you can make to raise awareness about the situation and to induce critical thinking. These choices can happen at work, when you’re in the company of friends and family, and in your inner monologue. The opportunity to choose is everywhere, you just have to see it.\n\nConsider this limited set of examples to stimulate ideas for what you can do:\n\n__Individual Choices__: Remember that you should see your own mind as an “endpoint” that requires protection. Get familiar with your hardwired[cognitive biases](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/65/Cognitive_bias_codex_en.svg), so that you can improve resisting them. Verify information through operational testing and triangulation (e.g. checking[multiple](https://www.allsides.com/unbiased-balanced-news)news sources). Learn about[mental models](https://fs.blog/mental-models/)and[43](#fn:43)[structured analytic techniques](https://www.amazon.com/Structured-Analytic-Techniques-Intelligence-Analysis/dp/150636893X). Read more books. Think in continuums instead of binary categories. Surround yourself with individuals who respectfully challenge what you think.Use AI-enabled systems (e.g. feeds and chatbots) carefully and with healthy skepticism. Improve your sleep, diet, and exercise. This all takes effort and it’s worth acknowledging the level of privilege it takes to have the time and resources to work on these.[44](#fn:44)\n\n__Social Choices__: Start conversations that*circle around*cognitive security across media types. For documentaries, consider[The AI Doc](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt39150120)and[The Social Dilemma](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11464826). For movies,[Idiocracy](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808),[WALL-E](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0910970),[Leave the World Behind](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt12747748), and[Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1341338/). For TV series,[The Undeclared War](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7939800),[3 Body Problem](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt13016388), and[Pluribus](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt22202452). Perhaps you can talk about cognitive warfare at your next[PowerPoint Party](https://www.realsimple.com/holidays-entertaining/entertaining/powerpoint-party-ideas), or consider reading[The Fourth Intelligence Revolution](https://www.amazon.com/dp/1250370906)for your next book club.\n\nYou can also be more subtle (or ambient) by providing grit to people’s views in a civil way. This involves*politely*asking questions like, “Why do you think that?” and “What is the evidence behind that?” This can take effort and be uncomfortable at first. But above all, meet your friends and family where they’re at, be empathetic, and actively seek out their perspectives with an open mind. When this goes well, everyone changes their mind in ways that builds consensus and strengthens relationships.[44](#fn:44)\n\n__Workplace Choices__: Everyone with a job has some skill that they are paid to be good at, that they can start to see differently and leverage toward collective cognitive security. Maybe this is the product manager who can enable more[humane design choices](https://www.humanetech.com/course), or the course designer who can induce critical thinking through(not just content), or the red team manager who can set exercise objectives to address subtle cognitive threats.*form*\n\nPerhaps instead of infusing cognitive security into your deliverables, it becomes a more subtle part of how you shape workplace culture. In a corporate environment, that could mean encouraging[thoughtful writing](https://slab.com/blog/jeff-bezos-writing-management-strategy/)and allowing time for[silent reflection](https://slab.com/blog/silent-meetings/)within meetings. Helping to empower the meaningful actions of others can also go a long way. Think about it as*morphing*your organization instead of fighting it.\n\nFor many of us, expanding this middle part of the Venn diagram might seem\nunusual at first. This is normal and takes some getting used to. In a cybernetic\nsense, I now see expanding the middle part for this pillar as a fun mini game of\ndiscovering “actuators” that induce critical thinking (e.g. [word\nchoice](https://www.airuniversity.af.edu/CASI/Articles/Article-Display/Article/3336932/itow-language-confrontation-in-cognitive-domain-operations/)), and then invoking them at\nthe right time and place for the right audience. It’s a subtle art.\n\nNow as rewarding as this pillar might be, it can sometimes be challenging in different ways requiring careful navigation. Here are some insights I’ve learned:\n\n-\n__Learning Curve__. As you may have noticed in reading through the*Problem Space*section, there’s a real learning curve to this subject matter and it requires careful discussion. Speaking about “mind control” as a matter-of-fact to an audience that’s not ready for it might lead to counterproductive misunderstandings. It’s important to realize that there’s a path (or gradient) to understanding the extent of cognitive warfare and you have to meet people and sectors within their[Overton window](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overton_window). For example, most companies might not actively exercise the foresight needed to defend Taiwan and Ukraine, but many of them care about topics like insider threat and workforce competency. Always remember to meet people where they’re at on this learning curve. -\n__Non-Partisan Solutions__. I know this is tough, but for every sector, I think it is critically important that introducing cognitive warfare must be done in a non-partisan way.[Moral foundations theory](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_foundations_theory)recognizes the psychological differences between liberals, conservatives, and libertarians. The inherent diversity in these perspectives can provide the necessary[grit](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njYciFC7mR8)for developing solutions that bridges divides in ways that are difficult for adversaries to polarize. Figuring out how to lower the temperature soonwill help get these mindsets to work together. At a personal level, learning about the cognitive domain and the human brain has resulted in a “centering” and “de-polarizing” effect for me. A clarifying effect that I didn’t realize I needed.[45](#fn:45)\n\n__Cross-Sector Coordination__. It’s not clear to me that any particular sector can productively “solo” efforts in cognitive security without dealing with hard limitations or ethical dilemmas. For government and industry, soloing risks further[democratic backsliding](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_backsliding). The risks of becoming what we oppose should emphasize the importance of trust and knowing when to pass the metaphorical basketball. I’ve previously[argued](https://jackson-t.com/are-we-helping/)that market incentives and long-term national security incentives seem to pull in opposite directions. If this resonates (as I’ve heard from[others](https://www.detectionengineering.net/p/det-eng-weekly-62-say-the-words-bart)), then it’s important to be wise enough to impose some self-restraint on what commercial entities*should*do, despite what they*could*do.\n\n### Pillar 3: Foster Communities of Interest\n\n“Teamwork makes the dream work.” Put another way, I see this last pillar as the\nengine that breathes life and creativity into the first two pillars. The Irish\npoet Pádraig Ó Tuama views creativity as a form of community building. He\n[writes](https://poetryunbound.substack.com/p/courage-and-rage-re-sending-now-open),\n“it is in the vulnerability and risk of cooperation that we find ourselves\nalive.”\n\nFostering [communities of interest](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_of_interest) can come in different forms:\n\n__Explore Existing Initiatives__. The cognitive security community is growing. If you’re looking to learn more, I would highlight the[Cognitive Security Institute](https://www.cognitivesecurityinstitute.org/)([talks](https://www.youtube.com/@cognitivesecurityinstitute/videos)) and the[Information Professionals Association](https://information-professionals.org/)([podcast](https://www.youtube.com/@informationprofessionals)). The[MAD Warfare](https://www.madwarfare.com/)podcast has a fun-but-educational way of making expert perspectives accessible to a general audience. Although not explicitly focused on cognitive security, the[Center for Humane Technology](https://www.humanetech.com/)([podcast](https://www.humanetech.com/podcast)) promotes similar outcomes. Collecting a variety of perspectives from reputable sources like these helps stimulate ideas for degrading adversary capabilities and building resilience. Engaging this way can also provide a “refuge” for those who work in industries which are less incentivized to recognize cognitive warfare.[46](#fn:46)\n\n__Trusted Brainstorm Groups__. In my experience, talking about cognitive security can sometimes be a delicate and vulnerable process depending on who you’re discussing with and where they are on the learning curve. But not talking about it can impede creativity and meaningful progress. My suggestion is to find some people you know who “get it” and talk with them to: build mutual and grounded understanding, trade ideas, and coordinate actions. Eventually, you might find yourself in a variety of multiple groups which helps foster creativity and avoid echo chambers.\n\nMy crude depiction of trusted brainstorm groups. The dotted lines represent their porous nature.\n\nIf the above are done right, the process of engaging will help you *practice*\nthe aspects of humanity that enable functional democracies. This process won’t\nbe smooth or efficient, but together, you’ll be able to search for objective\ntruth, deliberate, and build consensus. There is value in allowing space for\nserendipity to happen. Sometimes you’ll find unlikely allies. Expect to meet\npeople from different professions, sectors, educational backgrounds, economic\nstatus, and political mindsets. Sometimes you’ll need to build a shared language\nto pursue goals together (like Grace and Rocky from [ Project Hail\nMary](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Hail_Mary)).\n\nThis pillar will be important for rebuilding the trust networks that allow us to pass the metaphorical basketball between each other and sectors. At a time where most people are being conditioned to act inwardly, meaningful action requires us to resist that and act for the greater good.\n\n# Concluding Remarks\n\nIf you managed to read all the way to this point: thank you. I’m deeply grateful for your time and your willingness to grapple with the subject matter.\n\nIn this essay, we’ve come to understand that competition has shifted into the cognitive domain, where our minds are literally the targets for sensemaking and control. We learned how witting and unwitting adversaries to democracy are using cybernetic principles to build digital twins of our societies, putting them on the path to orchestrate personalized ambient realities and collectively degrade our cognitive “bit-depth.” Finally, we arrived at what I see as the three pillars in the solution space and the necessary mindset shift it will take to get there.\n\nSerious defence requires a whole-of-society effort to solve this collective action problem. We should simultaneously impose cost on adversaries (degrading their capabilities), actively become the most mature version of ourselves (build cognitive resiliency), and rebuild the trust networks that allow us to cooperate (foster communities of interest). All of this is going to take effort, creativity, trust, open-mindedness, and courage. Practicing these will allow us to take back what it means to be human in democratic societies before it’s too late.\n\nWhen I was first starting to learn about cognitive security as a cyber\npractitioner, I was overwhelmed with how late to the game we are. As a cog in\nthe system, I assumed meaningful action was somewhere out there beyond my\ncontrol. It took some time, but I can now recognize the choices I can make\nwithin each pillar. We’ve had control all along, but we just might not have\nrealized it. It is *because* we are cogs in the system that we can make unique\nchoices no one else can.\n\nIf you work in the commercial sector, let this post serve as an updated\n[reminder](https://jackson-t.com/are-we-helping/):\n\nRegardless of what role you play in our commercial ecosystem, the decisions you\nmake on a daily basis *matter*. Whether you are an executive or a frontline\nworker, you have the agency to make choices and those choices will *signal*\nsomething about your disposition.\n\nWill your choices maximize capital in the status quo way that furthers the interests of authoritarian adversaries in their mission to erode democracy and our cognitive security? Or will your choices help further the viability and cohesion of free and open societies—even when it’s the harder thing to do?\n\nWhat is your north star?\n\n# About Me\n\nThe following self-description probably diverges from the conventional “conference talk” style of writing these, but given the subject matter I’d like to write more authentically.\n\nI’m grappling with some form of imposter syndrome. Professionally, I portray\nmyself as an “offensive security engineer” as a way to fit in. Personally, I\ntend to see myself as more of a pattern-seeking social scientist at heart (who\nhappens to know how to code). I can’t seem to avoid noticing the psychological\neffects adversaries produce through their technical actions. 47 The effects\nthat many practitioners in commercial cyber security are not incentivized to\nnotice.\n\nAs some of you know, in school I majored in Public Policy and double-minored in\nPsychology and Computer Science. While I’m not an expert in any of these, what\nthis means is that I’ve had several years to ponder about: (1) the differences\nbetween autocratic and democratic systems, (2) how autocratic societies and\ntheir citizens are structurally configured to think in a\nnon-[WEIRD](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_WEIRDest_People_in_the_World) way,\nand (3) how that influences what they might see as their “offensive” use of\ncomputers. Together, I’ve found these helpful to avoid “mirror imaging.”[48](#fn:48)\n\nAs events have unfolded over the past decade, it’s been simultaneously fascinating and frustrating to work in the cyber security industry through these lenses and I wanted to use this essay as an opportunity to develop and share some of my insights. They draw on various sources, and might be painfully obvious to some, while being newer to some of us.\n\nI have been working on versions of this essay for the past couple of years. Given that the subject matter might sound controversial to some, I wanted to deepen my understanding and wait for the subject matter to start to become more mainstream. The spark for this research direction came around 2020 when I started to learn about OODA loops during the pandemic. Since then, I’ve published posts that should somewhat prime regular readers of this blog for the subject matter in this essay.\n\nLastly, you can find my interpretation of the times in which we live,\n[here](https://jackson-t.com/how-i-interpret-the-times-in-which-we-live/).\n\n-\nTo be clear: vendors not surfacing certain threats is certainly not out of malice, but rather in part due to the lack of commercial incentive. Most companies are not\n\n*wittingly*engaging in cognitive warfare, so I think the productive question to focus on is how to get commercial alignment for cognitive security.[↩︎](#fnref:1) -\nLater in the essay, I briefly discuss the effects that forms of media have on our cognition (e.g. books vs shorts). If you want to\n\n*feel*the difference and not just know the difference, I’d encourage you to read this essay first, and then compare with the AI-generated podcast.[↩︎](#fnref:2) -\nPlease\n\n[reach out](https://www.linkedin.com/in/jacksontvr/)to me if you think I’ve made a mistake and would like to suggest a correction or perspective.[↩︎](#fnref:3) -\nCredit goes to K. Melton for inspiring this phrasing. I found it in the\n\n[description](https://www.linkedin.com/posts/cognitive-security-institute_reality-pentesting-a-conceptual-framework-activity-7439320828464386048-yEhv)of her talk on “Reality Pentesting”.[↩︎](#fnref:4) -\nFrancois Chollet framed it as an optimization problem in his blog post called\n\n[What worries me about AI](https://medium.com/@francois.chollet/what-worries-me-about-ai-ed9df072b704): “In short, social network companies can simultaneously measure everything about us, and control the information we consume. And that’s an accelerating trend. When you have access to both perception and action, you’re looking at an AI problem. You can start establishing an optimization loop for human behavior, in which you observe the current state of your targets and keep tuning what information you feed them, until you start observing the opinions and behaviors you wanted to see. A large subset of the field of AI — in particular “reinforcement learning” — is about developing algorithms to solve such optimization problems as efficiently as possible, to close the loop and achieve full control of the target at hand — in this case, us. By moving our lives to the digital realm, we become vulnerable to that which rules it — AI algorithms.”[↩︎](#fnref:5) -\nBoth dates were found in page 3 of the book\n\n(2024), authored by Qinghai Miao and Fei-Yue Wang.*Artificial Intelligence for Science (AI4S): Frontiers and Perspectives Based on Parallel Intelligence*[↩︎](#fnref:6) -\nWhile we will discuss cognitive warfare later, I am attempting to emphasize how much of a head start adversaries like the PRC have in this domain. To counter these efforts, researchers Dean Hartley and Kenneth Jobson\n\n[advocate](https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-60184-3)for a “Manhattan Project level of national commitment to Cognitive Superiority.” By using the Manhattan Project as an analogy, I think it should be clear that a whole-of-society effort should not wait until after bombs have dropped, especially if we collectively cannot recognize them when they hit. As mentioned in a NATO[concept paper](https://innovationhub-act.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/CW-article-Claverie-du-Cluzel-final_0.pdf)by Bernard Claverie and François du Cluzel, “cognitive warfare is now with us. The main challenge is that it is essentially invisible; all you see is its impact, and by then … it is often too late.”[↩︎](#fnref:7) -\nAn\n\n[article](https://www.canada.ca/en/security-intelligence-service/corporate/publications/china-and-the-age-of-strategic-rivalry/big-data-and-the-social-credit-system-the-security-consequences.html)from a 2018 CSIS*Academic Outreach and Stakeholder Engagement*report states that “data can be collected on companies and individuals abroad, posing a challenge for countries not wishing to be part of a Chinese system of social control.”[↩︎](#fnref:8) -\nMy understanding of PI/ACP and my engineering experience suggests that the framework accommodates for multiple types of models and simulations, but the digital twin framing can serve as a useful introductory example. A digital twin can be implemented in the form of measurements and personas (both of which can be vectorized).\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:9) -\nTo play devil’s advocate, I suppose communist adversaries like the governments of Russia and China might take issue with framing them as parasites. Perhaps in their perspective, it’s more appropriate to label capitalism as the parasite to defend against. In\n\n, the late Mark Fisher wrote: “Capital is an abstract parasite, an insatiable vampire and zombie-maker; but the living flesh it converts into dead labor is ours, and the zombies it makes are us.”*Capitalist Realism*[↩︎](#fnref:10) -\nIt seems to me that natural side effect of competitive ACP-like systems is that volition will be fundamentally undermined when the distance between descriptive analytics (what is) and prescriptive analytics (what should be) gets smaller as a result of relentless optimization. People would become more reflexive instead of reflective.\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:11) -\nAs a highly speculative, point-in-time, remark: it seems to me that if (1) ACP-like AI systems were further integrated into societies, and (2) human administrators started to lose meaningful control over those systems, then I would struggle to see the gap between that situation and the emergent subjugation of competing\n\n[ASI](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superintelligence)s representing incompatible value systems. If this were to happen, the competition for narratives would still be there but it would mark the transition from human-on-the-loop to machine-is-the-loop.[↩︎](#fnref:12) -\nThis book was recommended by NATO commander Paul Groestad on the Cognitive Crucible podcast (\n\n[#210](https://information-professionals.org/episode/cognitive-crucible-episode-210/)). I would expect a TV series adaptation to have refreshed technological mechanics.[↩︎](#fnref:13) -\nYes, I am compelled to agree with the view that, when plainly and logically spoken, social control capabilities are effectively becoming mind control capabilities. While the mechanics of this is not as visually stimulating as what is portrayed in science fiction stories, I think they tend to capture the social dynamics well.\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:14) -\nDefinitions for terms like psychological, information, and cognitive warfare can be a little fuzzy at the conceptual level and have different schools of thought. As Bruce Schneier caveated in\n\n, “hacks of cognitive systems aren’t as cleanly delineated as the hacks described in previous chapters. […] I’m okay with this ambiguity. Humans are complicated. Cognitive systems are messy. Any discussion of them will be messy as well.” I personally think that a mixture of complementary conceptual definitions could actually be useful for informing operational definitions.*A Hacker’s Mind*\n\nIn, Dr. Robert Schmidle (scholar and retired USMC Lieutenant General) provides a more nuanced answer to what cognitive warfare (CW) is and how it differs from information operations (IO) and other non-kinetic forms of warfare.*Understanding Cognitive Warfare: Beyond Information*[↩︎](#fnref:15) -\nFor those that are philosophically inclined, two interesting novels to interpolate social and cognitive effects from are Ling Ma’s\n\n[Severance](https://www.amazon.ca/Severance-Novel-Ling-Ma/dp/0374261598)and J.M. Berger’s[Optimal](https://www.amazon.com/Optimal-J-M-Berger/dp/B08GLMNKJ1). Both take the gradual coarsening of human thinking to its limit, despite being induced through different means. It’s the biological “Shen Fever” in the former, and the successful rise of Artificial Superintelligence in the latter.[↩︎](#fnref:16) -\nIn the\n\n[UnCODE framework](https://osf.io/preprints/psyarxiv/7c2ez_v2)for cognitive warfare, the authors write: “In order to perturb a neural system (e.g. cause social incohesion in a society), there has to be some physical change at the lowest level of the neural system. In the case of a human social network, this change is at the level of single neurons in the brain of the humans that make up the social network. Because neural systems are fractal, local changes at the level of single neurons have the potential of permeating at increased levels of complexity up to the level of nations and even the global population. This is why CogWar goals can include sub-cellular effects as well as social-level effects. No matter what approach is used, the goal is always to influence activity at the lowest level of the neural system.”[↩︎](#fnref:17) -\nWhy do I think cognitive warfare will take decades to recover from? Well, let me put it this way: As with “EDR evasion” (better described as EDR persuasion), it seems to be more\n\n*cost-effective*for attackers to produce and deliver lower complexity inputs into actively degraded minds, than it is to produce and deliver higher complexity inputs into minds where cognitive processes are respected. There’s one difference though… an EDR can’t*actively defend*the degradation of its own defenses in a self-reinforcing way, but humans can. Another way to look it at is through David Troy’s[analogy](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1R_aVUrbAmkVXFF1vJWxnXE03FBtpxE8jkHF9P53n4Qk/edit)of recovering from a forest fire, which I find to be compelling.[↩︎](#fnref:18) -\nThis less technical version of my working theory is primarily guided by my combined social science and engineering backgrounds. It’s hard for me (or most people) to know\n\n*exactly*how the PRC is implementing ACP-like systems in classified settings for global social control. While that knowledge would satisfy my intellectual curiosity, I don’t think it’s strictly necessary for building defensive strategy in commercial environments or civil society. What is certain is that the S&T tends to converge (regardless of actor), and that commercial entities are relatively transparent about their innovations. It is in the PRC’s advantage to learn about Western technology in order to control us ([师夷长技以制夷](https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-981-99-0007-7.pdf)).[↩︎](#fnref:19) -\nIn commercial offensive cyber, we might loosely interpret BloodHound as a type of sensor, Nemesis as a type of controller, and ADCS exploitation as a type of actuator.\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:20) -\nThese systems work best when data is as close to real-time as possible. As Brian Russell and John Bicknell write in\n\n[The Coin of the Realm: Understanding and Predicting Relative System Behavior](https://information-professionals.org/the-coin-of-the-realm-understanding-and-predicting-relative-system-behavior/): “Complex systems change so dynamically that insight generation capabilities must be always processing data and serving up new insights. In any system of interest, therefore, the very most recent observations have the best opportunity to predict what is likely to happen next.”[↩︎](#fnref:21) -\nWhat I specifically mean by frame-dependency is that measurements and interventions are grounded within a concept or framework belonging to a particular discipline. This is intended to help with explainability and the organization of sensors and actuators. The explainability might come at a performance cost, and might not be as necessary for actors effectively operating with “\n\n[Merton’s laws](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/7589480)” instead of “Newton’s laws”.[↩︎](#fnref:22) -\nI think LLMs have a role in turning concept papers into what are effectively frame-dependent sensing programs. For example, a suite of programs could be used to identify opportunities to exploit\n\n[cognitive biases](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cognitive_bias_codex_en.svg). This would be particularly helpful when the stakes are lower and many decisions need to be made quickly beyond workforce (or even human) capacity.[↩︎](#fnref:23) -\n[Zep](https://www.getzep.com/)is a starting example of how this unfolds in a commercial context.[↩︎](#fnref:24) -\nThis is conceptually similar to the “\n\n[kill web](https://www.thecipherbrief.com/white-house-director-we-need-a-kill-web-for-modern-warfare)” concept as explained by Shawn Chenoweth (Director of Cognitive Advantage at the National Security Council), and is also informed by the premises in “[Disinformation and its effects on social capital networks](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1R_aVUrbAmkVXFF1vJWxnXE03FBtpxE8jkHF9P53n4Qk/edit?tab=t.0)” by David Troy. Operationally, this could be relevant for determining which people to influence in the network of a target individual or group, so that they could ultimately influence the target.[↩︎](#fnref:25) -\nAs visualized in the figure generated with DataMapPlot and Toponymy, this helps us understand which personas tend to cluster together and what topics they represent on multiple scales. We can further consider persona nodes being connected as a graph where the weights of edges represent distances between persona embeddings. This could allow us to use\n\n[bidirectional Dijkstra](https://networkx.org/documentation/stable/reference/algorithms/generated/networkx.algorithms.shortest_paths.weighted.bidirectional_dijkstra.html)to determine a path from a target’s persona toward a destination persona (e.g. one with different consumer or political preferences). Operationally, constructing these paths could be relevant for the dynamic sequencing of stimuli intended to gradually*morph*the target persona toward the destination persona (usually unbeknownst to the target).\n\nThis line of thinking was inspired by Paul Lamere’s[“boil the frog” approach](https://web.archive.org/web/20250119010243/http://boilthefrog.playlistmachinery.com/)for creating a playlist of Spotify tracks that can gradually nudge you from one music genre to another. Each content recommendation in the sequence is meant to “minimize the difference in energy” from one track to the next, which should make the genre transition seem effortless to the listener being influenced.[↩︎](#fnref:26) -\nI’m still developing my understanding of what I currently call “belief landscapes,” but the gist of it is to imagine topics clustered together instead of personas. The clustering is expected to vary depending on the inferred perceptions of the target individual or group. Each topic node is quantified with affect and bit-depth metrics. The former estimates how positively or negatively they feel about the topic, and the latter estimates the how reflective or reflexive their thoughts are on the topic. The nodes could be connected as a undirected graph where the edges represent distances between topics.\n\nOperationally, I’ve been pondering about how this could be used to alter a target’s affect and bit-depth on topics of concern to system commanders. Particularly when it comes to exploiting associative memory to generate a content sequence that gradually and effortlessly takes a target from what they’re currently thinking about to the destination topic with the affect and bit-depth desired by commanders. The wording for “content sequence” is intentionally broad, with use-cases for conversation topic sequences in one-on-one “social engineering” settings, or varying degrees of control over social media feeds. This line of thinking was inspired by Sean Guillory’s work on “[strengths of beliefs and cares](https://web.archive.org/web/20250211181740/https://www.boozallen.com/insights/cyber/tech/measurement-and-visualization-of-the-cognitive-domain.html)” (SoBaC).[↩︎](#fnref:27) -\nFurther notes on form: It should become widely understood that “content creators” compete on form as much as they do with content. Form that degrades nuanced thinking isn’t just in the information payloads, but extends into the design of platforms (infinite scroll, upvoting or downvoting ideas, swiping left or right for dates, etc.). When you start to see it this way, it becomes easier to recognize\n\n*product design*as one of the pervasive yet subtle “battlespaces” for both degrading and improving cognition.[↩︎](#fnref:28) -\nI’m curious about what percentage of commercial offensive security teams have explored (or recognize) some level of the attack surface here.\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:29) -\nThe false dichotomy of “mind-body dualism” is emphasized in the paper for the\n\n[UnCODE framework](https://osf.io/preprints/psyarxiv/7c2ez_v2).[↩︎](#fnref:30) -\nReed Hastings, the CEO of Netflix, has said: “You get a show or a movie you’re really dying to watch, and you end up staying up late at night, so we actually compete with sleep.” To Jake Bebber (a scholar for the Hudson Institute), this\n\n[suggests](https://www.hudson.org/defense-strategy/cognitive-competition-conflict-war-ontological-approach-robert-jake-bebber)that “businesses have a growing financial interest even in altering biological needs such as sleep patterns, contributing to cognitive performance problems in order to maximize profitability.”[↩︎](#fnref:31) -\nGiven how critically useful diverse perspectives are, I think any organization building out systems like these should hire for both disciplinary analysts and interdisciplinary synthesizers.\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:32) -\nFor those that are philosophically inclined: in a metaphorical way, it’s a little bit like living in more subtle/boring versions of\n\n*The Truman Show*(1998), the “[dream world](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O5b0ZxUWNf0?t=45)” known as*The Matrix*(1999), or the severed floor in*Severance*(2022). To be clear, I do not recommend interpreting these stories literally. The operationalization of Jean Baudrillard’s theory of Simulacra and Simulation is a more nuanced way to look at it. Anthony Vinci briefly touches on Baudrillard’s work in his book, in the chapter entitled “Philosopher Spy”. I found[this podcast](https://www.philosophizethis.org/podcast/simulacra-and-simulation)by Stephen West to be a useful introduction on this topic.[↩︎](#fnref:33) -\nI believe Ian Levy (ex-GCHQ) described it well in his\n\n[departing essay](https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/blog-post/so-long-thanks-for-all-the-bits): “Even in the best case, their commercial risk model is not the same as a national security risk model, and their commercial incentives are definitely not aligned with managing long-term national security. In the likely case, it’s worse.”[↩︎](#fnref:34) -\nHere’s a more speculative and condensed take on what I think is driving the collective action problem: fractal polarization across target population segments, which emerges from a competition of “\n\n*value*systems” (belief sets) and is accelerated by a Katamari-like competition of “value*systems*” (belief entrenchment mechanisms).[↩︎](#fnref:35) -\nIn practice, a more nuanced version of this might be plurilateralism represented as a multi-net basketball game, or as a competition of operating systems, but that’s probably a philosophical topic on its own.\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:36) -\nI’m\n\n[borrowing](https://milvus.io/ai-quick-reference/what-is-an-action-space-in-rl)the “action space” concept from Reinforcement Learning (RL). In this context, “the action space defines all possible actions an agent can take within an environment.”[↩︎](#fnref:37) -\nA quick note on the idea generation process: As a thought experiment, I find it useful to imagine the mature organizational structure of a hypothetical “Chief Cognitive Security Officer” (CCSO) about 10 years from today. Perhaps it would adapt a subset of functions within CISO and CHRO organizational structures. In any case, setting that as a destination and\n\n*interpolating*from that provides a stream of ideas to perform discovery on.[↩︎](#fnref:38) -\nThis is a paraphrase of a\n\n[quote](https://recoveringfed.com/2020/04/16/thinking-in-the-time-of-coronavirus-part-2/)from Carmen Medina (former CIA Deputy Director of Intelligence): “Our ability to know is a function for our tools for knowing.”[↩︎](#fnref:39) -\nThe legend refers to three types of analysts (or agentic representations) that would be nominally responsible for populating different sets of nodes and relationships. As I mentioned earlier, how I’m thinking about this needs further refinement (and cohesive examples), but here’s how I delineate them for now:\n\n- “Industry Analysts” would primarily populate the\n*Data*and*Process*nodes produced by organizations. Some industry analysts will operate on externally-facing information (e.g. studying data breaches, privacy policies, and product documentation), whereas others will operate on internally-facing information (e.g. as an employee or vendor of a particular organization). - “Science and Technology (S&T) Analysts” are\n*Discipline*-specific specialists that review*Data*and*Processes*through the lenses (or*Frames*) within their discipline to inform the development of*Sensors*,*Controllers*, and*Actuators*. - “Intelligence Analysts”\nare\n*Actor*-specific specialists who map out (1) their likely*Objectives*, (2) whether speculated*Sensors*,*Controllers*, and*Actuators*could support those objectives, and (3) whether the*Actors*are known to have access to the*Data*and*Processes*needed to support those*Sensors*,*Controllers*, and*Actuators*.\n\nI think distributing analysis this way should enable faster and more accurate organization of knowledge while making it easier for a variety of downstream consumers to query knowledge using a shared vocabulary.\n\nWhile not depicted in the diagram, it should also be noted that each node can have child nodes of the same type. For example, the*Organization*node for*Alphabet Inc.*would have child*Organization*nodes for*Google LLC*and*Waymo LLC*.[↩︎](#fnref:40) - “Industry Analysts” would primarily populate the\n-\nI’m borrowing useful word choice from\n\n[Tristan Harris](https://www.davidmeermanscott.com/blog/the-ai-doc-or-how-i-became-an-apocaloptimist)(co-founder of the Center for Human Technology): “If we can be the most mature version of ourselves, there might be a way through this.”[↩︎](#fnref:41) -\nIn his book, Vinci makes his case this way: “To me, understanding modern intelligence is about learning how to think like an intelligence officer and viewing the world of intelligence competition through a new lens. And once you’ve seen it this new way, you can’t unsee it. Those news blips about TikTok and Chinese space planes and Russian hackers will connect and coalesce for you, increasing your understanding of what the real threats are, to all of us as individual citizens of a democratic world.”\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:42) -\nI really like\n\n[this quote](https://fs.blog/mental-models/)from Charlie Munger: “If you want to be a good thinker, you must develop a mind that can jump the jurisdictional boundaries. You don’t have to know it all. Just take in the best big ideas from all these disciplines. And it’s not that hard to do.”[↩︎](#fnref:43) -\nThe phrasing for this was adapted from a\n\n[conversation](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aA7_8NdcawM)on critical thinking with University of Alberta education psychology professor, Jacqueline Leighton.[↩︎](#fnref:44)[↩︎](#fnref1:44) -\nI sometimes worry that we are running out of time for cognitive security to remain non-partisan. It seems like we’re swimming in an information environment where it’s becoming very easy to pick a side and form a polarized opinion on literally any topic. The abstract\n\n[mental picture](https://youtu.be/0DBGXN48tV4?t=77)I have is of being sucked into an ever expanding black hole. One where we are collectively inching closer to standing on the precipice of its event horizon.[↩︎](#fnref:45) -\nIn some companies, it may not be commercially viable to recognize certain adversaries or classes of adversaries. Perhaps there is something to be said about what commercially-identified adversaries are adversaries of. For example, the\n\n*Disruptions on the Horizon*2024[report](https://horizons.service.canada.ca/en/2024/disruptions/index.shtml)by Policy Horizons Canada lists “billionaires run the world” as a plausible and likely disruption. The infographic below is from the report:\n\n[↩︎](#fnref:46) -\nAs Kier Giles describes in the\n\n[Handbook of Russian Information Warfare](https://www.ndc.nato.int/download/handbook-of-russian-information-warfare-by-keir-giles/): “Instead of cyberspace, Russia refers to ‘information space,’ and includes in this space both computer and human information processing, in effect the cognitive domain. Within information space, the closest Russian thinking comes to separating out CNO from other activities is division into the information-technical and information-psychological domains, the two main strands of information warfare in Russian thinking.”[↩︎](#fnref:47) -\nTo elaborate on what I mean, please see page 70 of\n\nby Richards J. Heuer Jr. for his definition of mirror imaging.*Psychology of Intelligence Analysis*[↩︎](#fnref:48)", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/parallel-intelligence-and-cognitive-warfare", "canonical_source": "https://jackson-t.com/parallel-intelligence-and-cognitive-warfare/", "published_at": "2026-06-12 12:31:09+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-06-12 12:49:25.879467+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["ai-safety", "ai-policy", "ai-ethics"], "entities": ["François Chollet"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/parallel-intelligence-and-cognitive-warfare", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/parallel-intelligence-and-cognitive-warfare.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/parallel-intelligence-and-cognitive-warfare.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/parallel-intelligence-and-cognitive-warfare.jsonld"}}