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Electronic Crime

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 18.04
  Total Words: 4511
  Total Characters: 27720
  Number of Sentences: 344


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 13.11
  Characters per Words: 6.14


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 38.77
  Fog Scale Level: 13.74
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 11.11  

electronic crime

Electronic Crime



Introduction



In the past decade, computer and networking technology has seen enormous
growth. It is now possible for people all over the world to communicate and
share information from virtually anywhere. This growth however, has not come
without a price. With the advent of the "Information Highway", as it's
coined, a new methodology in crime has been created. Electronic crime has been
responsible for some of the most financially devastating victimizations in
society.

In the recent past, society has seen malicious editing of the Justice
Department web page unauthorized access into classified government computer
files, phone card and credit card fraud, and electronic embezzlement. All these
crimes are committed in the name of "free speech." These new breed of
criminals claim that information should not be suppressed or protected and that
the crimes they commit are really not crimes at all. What they choose to deny is
that the nature of their actions are slowly consuming the fabric of our
country's moral and ethical trust in the information age.

Federal law enforcement agencies, as well as commercial computer companies,
have been scrambling around in an attempt to "educate" the public on
how to prevent computer crime from happening to them. They inform us whenever
there is an attack, provide us with mostly ineffective anti-virus software, and
we are left feeling isolated and vulnerable. I do not feel that this defensive
posture is effective because it is not pro-active. Society is still being
attacked by highly skilled computer criminals of which we know very little about
them, their motives, and their tools of the trade. Therefore, to be effective in
defense, we must understand how these attacks take place from a technical
stand-point. To some degree, we must learn to become a computer criminal. Then
we will be in a better position to defend against these victimizations that
affect us on...

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