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Cybercrime: An Epidemic: Who commits these crimes, and what are their motivations?

Published:01 November 2006Publication History
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Abstract

Painted in the broadest of strokes, cybercrime essentially is the leveraging of information systems and technology to commit larceny, extortion, identity theft, fraud, and, in some cases, corporate espionage. Who are the miscreants who commit these crimes, and what are their motivations? One might imagine they are not the same individuals committing crimes in the physical world. Bank robbers and scam artists garner a certain public notoriety after only a few occurrences of their crimes, yet cybercriminals largely remain invisible and unheralded. Based on sketchy news accounts and a few public arrests, such as Mafiaboy, accused of paralyzing Amazon, CNN, and other Web sites, the public may infer these miscreants are merely a subculture of teenagers. In this article we provide insight into the root causes of cybercrime, its participants and their motivations, and we identify some of the issues inherent in dealing with this crime wave.

References

  1. National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace; http://www.whitehouse.gov/pcipb/.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  2. Council on Europe; http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/Commun/QueVoulezVous.asp?NT=185&CM=8&DF=8/18/2006&CL=ENGGoogle ScholarGoogle Scholar
  3. Charney, S. 2005. Combating cybercrime: a public-private strategy in the digital environment; http://www.nwacc.org/programs/conf05/UNCrimeCongressPaper.doc.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar

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  1. Cybercrime: An Epidemic: Who commits these crimes, and what are their motivations?

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    • Published in

      cover image Queue
      Queue  Volume 4, Issue 9
      Cybercrime
      November 2006
      44 pages
      ISSN:1542-7730
      EISSN:1542-7749
      DOI:10.1145/1180176
      Issue’s Table of Contents

      Copyright © 2006 ACM

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      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 1 November 2006

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