Right up front, let me say that anyone who runs through the Internet during any part of their day, needs to read this book. It pulls the cover back on where a majority of the content you see actually comes from.
The author walks through the various types of content and how they are fashioned to get past our internal ad filters. Advertising without the audience actually knowing it is advertising. Hence, "Black Ops".
Advertising now takes many forms. From Publishers as Marketers (Native) to Marketers as Publishers (Content), the reader is shown how the trade tricks consumers into believing the ads are simply blog posts, for example. But are actually carefully crafted marketing literature with the express intent to influence without being overt about it.
Think about the whole idea of "sharing". People like to share links to videos, pictures, blog posts, etc. A lot of such sharable content is actually created by someone in the pay of an advertiser. The best way to influence is through someone's friends, the thinking goes. Hence, a cute video with a subtle tag line at the end for the sponsoring company, is designed to take advantage of the network effect.
After reading this book, you will not look at the Internet in the same way again. You will question everything you read, which is how it should be. Otherwise we are all sheep.