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  1. Susan W. Brenner. Bloomsbury Publishing USA, Feb 26, 2010 - Social Science - 296 pages. This fascinating and timely book traces the emergence and evolution of cybercrime as an increasingly intransigent threat to society.Cybercrime: Criminal Threats from Cyberspace is intended to explain two things: what cybercrime is and why the average citizen ...

  2. Jun 16, 2022 · A recent report suggests that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) record around 80 billion automated scans daily by online perpetrators with the aim of identifying targets for cybercrime (Lewis, 2018), and in the year ending September 2019, 1 million ‘computer misuse’ crimes were reportedly committed against households in England and Wales (National Crime Agency [NCA], 2020). Online crime is ...

  3. Jun 17, 2013 · A case study of an online behaviour system in crime. This study investigates social media fraud facilitated by botnets to understand the onset and maturation of this new online offending behaviour and concludes that the rise in cybercrime is a result of the behaviours of all actors in the system, not just those who offend.

  4. www.semanticscholar.org › paper › Cybercrime-BrennerCybercrime - Semantic Scholar

    Cybercrime: Criminal Threats from Cyberspace is intended to explain two things: what cybercrime is and why the average citizen should care about it and an in-depth discussion of the legal and policy issues surrounding it. This fascinating and timely book traces the emergence and evolution of cybercrime as an increasingly intransigent threat to society. Cybercrime: Criminal Threats from ...

    • Cybercrime Research in Criminology
    • Defining Cybercrime
    • Cybercrime Classification and Key Actors in The Cybercrime Ecosystem
    • Trends in Cybercrime Research Publications

    Criminology is the study of deviance and crime, and it has developed to encompass the themes of crime characteristics, causes, consequences, the mechanisms of victims and offenders, offenses, and the criminal justice system (ASC 2019). Cybercrime research, (Cybercriminology is not widely acknowledged as a subdiscipline of criminology at this moment...

    The term “cybercrime” was first coined by William Gibson in 1982 (Wall 2007a). Since then, the boundaries defining cybercrime have expanded. During the genesis of “cybercrime” as a field, the earliest generations of scholars and organizations preferred the term “computer crimes,” in the narrower sense of a computer-based cybercrime, over “cybercrim...

    Beyond these definitions, one convention of classifying a cybercrime is to identify it as either a cyber-dependent and cyber-enabled crime. On the one hand, cyber-dependent crimes (or “pure” cybercrimes) are offenses that can only be committed using a computer, computer networks, or other forms of information communications technology (ICT). These ...

    Without a doubt, scholarly attention has increased dramatically in the past decade as compared to other types of crimes (see reviews in Bossler 2017; D’Arcy and Herath 2011; Holt and Bossler 2014; Maimon and Louderback 2019). Drawing from systematic literature search of scholarly databases, research articles and monographs on cybercrime were obtain...

  5. Jan 1, 2010 · Cybercrime is a representation of the mutation of crime from the real world to cyberspace, while cyberspace is used as a tool by criminals to commit crimes in new ways [18]. Furthermore, Brenner ...

  6. Re-thinking crime control strategies By Susan W. Brenner. Book Crime Online. Click here to navigate to parent product. Edition 1st Edition. First Published 2006.

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