Members of the U.S. military are being instructed to hide 
their identities on social media websites by replacing their profile 
images with cartoons or avatars.
A series of guidance documents have been circulated by the FBI among 
military units warning personnel and their families to conceal their 
faces when using sites including Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Google+.
 The warnings have apparently been prompted by concerns that Islamic 
State militants could use social media to identify targets in the United
 States.
The documents contain advice on how to ensure privacy online, and 
feature a series of social network “dos and don’ts.” They urge that 
military employees:
Avoid posting or tagging images of you or your family that clearly show your face. Select pictures taken at a distance, at an angle, or otherwise concealed. Never post smartphone photos, and don’t use your face as a profile photo. Instead, use cartoons or avatars.
The FBI makes a variety of suggestions designed to limit how members of the military can be identified online. For example, the bureau suggests not using hashtags on Twitter so as “to avoid being indexed and associated with a topic by Twitter search.”
The guidance papers were circulated in recent weeks, according to 
military sources, prior to a new warning about potential Islamic State 
attacks issued by the FBI over the weekend. The bureau issued a bulletin
 Sunday telling military staff that “overseas based individuals are 
looking for like-minded individuals in the U.S. to carry out these 
attacks,” adding: “we also request members of the military review their 
online social media presence for any information that might attract the 
attention of violent extremists.”
In September, Homeland Security officials told Congress
 that there was no current intelligence suggesting Islamic State 
militants were plotting attacks on the United States. The group’s 
“ability to carry out complex large-scale attacks in the West is 
currently limited,” said Nicholas Rasmussen, deputy director of the 
National Counterterrorism Center. The greater concern among security 
officials is likely the possibility of lone-wolf-style attacks against 
military personnel, of the kind seen more recently in Canada and the United Kingdom.
The Department of Defense had not responded to a request for comment on this post at time of publication.
Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
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