10 ways the Internet can kill you

The Internet is a mine of useful information, a repository of knowledge that makes the Library of Alexandria look like a leaflet. So naturally, we're using all that information to try and kill ourselves – and to kill others. The thought of would-be terrorists downloading the explosive equivalents of a Haynes manual is pretty scary, but do such things exist? And are would-be bombers really using the Internet to download the recipe for ricin and peruse the pages of the Anarchist Cookbook?

Factor in the eBooks and sites that tell you how to make bombs, booby-traps or botnets, the ease with which you can track and trace individuals, and all the other dubious joys of the information revolution, and we face an obvious question: is there such a thing as too much information?

Jeremy Binnie is News and Analysis Editor at Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Centre. He notes that the most easily found ricin recipe is useless and that many terror manuals have a tenuous grasp of reality. "We've reviewed Arabic-language manuals available on jihadist websites, and they are often vague, if not technically inaccurate," he says. "Much of the information is derived from the Anarchist Cookbook and its imitators, or US survivalist manuals, and are really of little use as online tutorials – the ricin recipe being an excellent example. The threat from this poison was massively over‑hyped by the media. This also applies to manuals on making chemical, biological and radiological weapons."