The terrorist group is reportedly experimenting with decentralized financial tech to make its content harder to take down
IS propaganda photo © AFP / Welayat Tarablos
Several pieces of digital art praising militants from the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terror group indicate the jihadists may be branching out into emerging financial technologies in a bid to circumvent online platforms’ blocking of its content, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing several intelligence analysts.
A non-fungible token (NFT) emblazoned with the terrorist group’s logo and a brief description of an attack on a Taliban position was created to test whether the blockchain-based model could be used to raise funds and attract members to the cause, former US intelligence officials told the outlet.
Titled IS-NEWS #01, it was one of three uploaded by the same ‘artist’ on the same day last week. The other two depict a man in full gas mask apparently manufacturing explosives and a comparison shot showing a cigarette next to a traditional toothbrush to discourage smoking – a crime under Islamic State rule.
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The images were created by a “sympathizer” of IS rather than a bona fide member, and were not actually traded or sold. Attempts to contact the creator reportedly went unanswered, and IS didn’t comment.
However, the NFTs are seen as an indication that the militants are taking advantage of decentralized financial technologies, which Mario Cosby, a former federal intelligence analyst, told the Journal are “as censorship-proof as you can get.” The newspaper notes, however, that many social media sites and marketplaces that sell them “take down links to offensive NFTs” and their potential for going viral is thus very low.
Indeed, OpenSea, one of the largest NFT marketplaces, took IS-NEWS #01 down for violating its “zero-tolerance policy for listings that incite hate and violence” and deleted the poster’s account. The ‘artwork’ is still available via the IPFS protocol, but while files stored on that system are extremely difficult to take down, they are also all but impossible for the casual web surfer to stumble upon.
Critics of NFT marketplaces and other decentralized financial technologies argue the artworks could serve as a revenue stream for not only terrorists but arms and drug dealers, corrupt governments, and other unsavory types drawn to the supposed anonymity and privacy of the blockchain.
With IS all but driven out of its real-world caliphate, the group has no choice but to seek out recruits online, intelligence analysts argue, and the US Treasury Department has repeatedly called for regulation of cryptocurrencies and other digital assets, insisting they are ripe for “exploitation by those seeking to launder illicit proceeds of crime.”
However, bitcoin and many other blockchains, including the Ethereum used for many NFTs, are not actually anonymous, which could give governments an opening to track the jihadists.