Doctoring Documents

Doctoring Documents
Mistruth in History and Cybersecurity

River Publishers Series in Document Engineering

Doctoring Documents
Mistruth in History and Cybersecurity Forthcoming

Authors:
Steven Simske, Department of Systems Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA
Dallen Simske, Fort Collins, CO, USA

ISBN: 9788770048330 e-ISBN: 9788770048323

Available: August 2025


This book explores the primary methods, presented as a set of thirteen patterns, used to insert mistruth in historical narratives. These patterns culminate in the broadest of patterns, versioning and propaganda, which are used to show that mistruth is unavoidable in any historical narrative. This also supports the argument that a primary task of the historian is to provide their own contextual considerations sufficiently to help their readers create their own version. The value of a deep, mistruth-aware analysis of history is thus shown to be crucial for understanding how to protect data of all types in today’s electronic society.

In the Internet age, the history, literature, culture, and training of humans has increasingly moved on-line. While this makes traditionally difficult-to-access content available (in theory) to all, it also exposes the truth associated with these hallmarks of civilization to attack by those who wish to replace it with their own version of history, literature, culture, and learning.

Each chapter includes a brief “cyber salon” applying the historical principles to the field of cybersecurity, which is of critical importance to preserving truth in an on-line world.

Authentication, cybersecurity, deception, fraud, historical record, history, misrepresentation, mistrust, mistruth, patterns for mistruth

Interview:

  1. Overview, outline, introduction
  2. Omissions
  3. Disparity
  4. Generalization
  5. Differential Emphasis and Evaluation
  6. Omniscient Historian
  7. Anachronism
  8. Romantic Nationalism, Favoritism, Provincialism, Racism, Ismism
  9. Emboldening Situations
  10. Valence and Arousal, Kronos, Timing in a Document
  11. Hyperbole
  12. Transitive Trust and Transitive "Sus"
  13. Versioning
  14. Propaganda
  15. Summary and Conclusions