With the support from the UK’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA), this paper presents the findings from a two-month comparison study between the underground economy in China and the West. Significant differences were found which are due to traditional boundaries of crime, such as cultural and language barriers. Lastly, Social Network Analysis (SNA) is proposed and discussed as a tool for future cybercrime research
The Crime as a Service (CaaS) model allows cybercriminals to specialise in certain illicit fields, i...
The Internet has opened up a Pandora's Box of crime: the proliferation of traditional as well as the...
Organised criminal groups are moving more of their activities from traditionally physical crime into...
Over the last decade, a sophisticated underground economy has emerged over the Internet in which cyb...
With 420 million Internet users, China has become the world’s largest Internet population. Yet, the ...
Cybercrime is the world’s biggest growth industry and is now costing an estimated €180 billion loss...
Following the rise of the Internet age in late 1980’s, Internet communication now gradually moved to...
With the growing sophistication and use of information technology, the past decade has seen a major ...
Cybercrime is an increasing area of study in the field of criminology. With the advancement of techn...
This chapter presents an overview of emerging issues in the psychology of human behaviour and the ev...
The Internet has been playing crucial roles in our life for decades by opening a new separated and f...
This thesis contributes to our understanding of the nature and extent of cybercrime in and between R...
In the era of galloping globalization and the world of new information technologies, the vast majori...
The purpose of the study is to highlight the main issues of developing countries regarding cybercrim...
The agreed consensus among criminologists today is that globalisation has been beneficial for organi...
The Crime as a Service (CaaS) model allows cybercriminals to specialise in certain illicit fields, i...
The Internet has opened up a Pandora's Box of crime: the proliferation of traditional as well as the...
Organised criminal groups are moving more of their activities from traditionally physical crime into...
Over the last decade, a sophisticated underground economy has emerged over the Internet in which cyb...
With 420 million Internet users, China has become the world’s largest Internet population. Yet, the ...
Cybercrime is the world’s biggest growth industry and is now costing an estimated €180 billion loss...
Following the rise of the Internet age in late 1980’s, Internet communication now gradually moved to...
With the growing sophistication and use of information technology, the past decade has seen a major ...
Cybercrime is an increasing area of study in the field of criminology. With the advancement of techn...
This chapter presents an overview of emerging issues in the psychology of human behaviour and the ev...
The Internet has been playing crucial roles in our life for decades by opening a new separated and f...
This thesis contributes to our understanding of the nature and extent of cybercrime in and between R...
In the era of galloping globalization and the world of new information technologies, the vast majori...
The purpose of the study is to highlight the main issues of developing countries regarding cybercrim...
The agreed consensus among criminologists today is that globalisation has been beneficial for organi...
The Crime as a Service (CaaS) model allows cybercriminals to specialise in certain illicit fields, i...
The Internet has opened up a Pandora's Box of crime: the proliferation of traditional as well as the...
Organised criminal groups are moving more of their activities from traditionally physical crime into...